Biadgilgn Demissie1,2,3,4 · Jan Nyssen3 · Sofe Annys3 · Emnet Negash3,5 · Tesfakiros Gebrehiwet2
· Fetien Abay6 · Eleonore Wolf4
Military conficts strongly afect agricultural activities. This has strong implications for people’s livelihoods when agriculture is the backbone of the economy. We assessed the efect of the Tigray confict on farming activities using freely available remote sensing data. For detecting greenness, a normalized diference vegetation Index (NDVI) was analyzed in Google Earth Engine (GEE) using Sentinel 2 satellite images acquired in the pre-war (2020) and during war (2021) spring seasons.
CHIRPS data were analyzed in GEE to understand the rainfall conditions. The NDVI of 2020 showed that farmlands were poorly covered with vegetation. However, in 2021, vegetation cover existed in the same season. The NDVI changes stretched from −0.72 to 0.83. The changes in greenness were categorized as increase (2167 km2 ), some increase (18,386 km2 ), no change (1.6 km2 ), some decrease (8269 km2), and decrease (362 km2). Overall, 72% of the farmlands have seen increases in green vegetation before crops started to grow in 2021. Scattered patches with decreases in vegetation cover correspond to irrigation farms and spring-cropping rain-fed farms uncultivated in 2021. There was no clear pattern of changes in vegetation cover as a function of agro-climatic conditions.
The precipitation analysis shows less rainfall in 2021 as compared to 2020, indicating that precipitation has not been an important factor. The conflict is most responsible for fallowing farmlands
covered with weeds in the spring season of 2021. The use of freely accessible remote sensing data helps recognizing absence of ploughing in crisis times.