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Laser Pulse East Africa Water Security Project

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  • Prof. Eng. Bancy Mati -Laser Pulse Project Translation Partner for Kenya

Cover photoSasumua river catchment Bancy and Chairman-Kibiru Outfall Water Pan-Jabini Tree tomato at Jabini Thika River at the top Sasumua river-washing hands Narrow channel terrace Research team at Thika River Sasumua catchment deforested Sasumua catchment-meeting team Sasumua River at bridge Sasumua river at bridge-see that Sasumua river catchment Canal flow-Kibiru Outfall Group discussion-Sasumua Group photo-Sasumua damJPG Irrigation in Jabini Maize and water pan Maize crop in Jabini Meter gage-Jabini-Sasumua river Cabbage at Jabini Bancy at Thika River2 Bancy at Thika River

Surface and ground water availability in East Africa varies substantially with time and across subregions.
Changes in climate, land use/cover and management are key factors impacting on the integrity of water
resources. Yet water-related data are generally insufficient, unavailable, or inaccessible for planning,
effective decision-making and management of the resource. This project thus seeks water information
which is processed using hydrological models, then packaged and deployed making it Findable,
Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR) in accordance with open data FAIR Guiding Principles.

About This Project

This is a two-year research and translation project which commenced in October 2020. The project
addresses water security as a priority and use of data in decision support systems. It is focused on three
sub-watersheds in East Africa, namely; Sasumua river watershed in Kenya, Simiyu river watershed in
Tanzania; and Murchison Bay watershed in Uganda. The overall goal of the project is to provide water
information, data access and decision support to improve water resources (quantity, quality)
management and, ultimately, water security in the study areas in East Africa. It seeks to determine the
current and potential future states of water resources in the region with regard to water budgets,
quality, quantity and impacts of climate change shocks on water availability and use. The main
Objectives include:
1) Develop a broad dataset describing trends and current and future states of water
resources (quantity and quality) in the study region;
2) Provide results, data, and base model parameters in such a way that these are easily
discoverable, accessible, ready to use, and free; and
3) Provide training to water managers, policy-makers and other water resources personnel on the
use and interpretation of the results, data, and other materials developed through this project.
The project uses a combination of existing climate data, rainfall data and modeling approaches using
the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) to conduct analysis. All partners were involved from the
onset including research planning and the design, development, and packaging of project products.
The translation partners actively engage in the project including contributing ideas, seeking data and
engaging stakeholder meetings, field visits and webinars. The

Project Implementers/ Research Leads


Prof. Margaret W. Gitau - Purdue University, USA
Daniel N. Moriasi - USDA-ARS Grazinglands Research Laboratory, USA
Dr. Nicholas Kiggundu - Makerere University, Uganda
Dr. Subira Eva Munishi - University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania

Research Translation Partners

Prof. Bancy M. Mati, Resource Plan (Kenya)
Dr. Victor Kongo - Global Water Partnership Tanzania (GWP-TZ), Tanzania
Dr. James Kisseka - Stichting Aidenvironment (RAIN, Uganda), Uganda
For more about this project, see other presentations and documents in this portal.


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