Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Utilizing AI for drought prediction in Kenya

desert
Credit: Pixabay from Pexels

Rising temperatures and intensifying drought continue to worsen with the global climate crisis. According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 55 million people worldwide are affected by drought each year—a number expected to grow as climate change becomes more extreme.

Through the power of artificial intelligence (AI), Andrew Watford, a fourth-year Faculty of Science student at the University of Waterloo, is addressing this challenge by developing more accurate and interpretable tools for forecasting .

As part of his co-op term in the Mathematical Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics program and his stellar promise as a researcher in the field, Watford was afforded the opportunity to contribute to a study on the use of AI to analyze vegetation health and forecast drought patterns in Kenya. The paper, now in Ecological Informatics, compares the performance of a mechanistic model to two physics-informed machine learning approaches.

Watford's role under the supervision of Drs. Chris Bauch (Faculty of Mathematics) and Madhur Anand (University of Guelph) involved writing code to predict the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in drought-prone regions of Kenya. Through further refinement of these models, the research aims to enhance machine learning methods to improve drought prediction, which could lead to the development of early warning systems and mitigation strategies.

"Our goal was to bring together mathematics and machine learning to develop new methodologies and push the field forward to predict drought," Watford says. "We are still far off from predicting drought five years in the future with certainty, but it's a step towards trying to find the best way to do that."

The ability to predict droughts earlier offers immense benefits, including enabling local governments to implement effective water management strategies, allowing farmers to select drought-resistant crops, and significantly enhancing natural disaster preparedness that could save lives.

In a time where and are becoming more prevalent, incorporating machine learning models to help mitigate these threats becomes increasingly important. Home to the largest co-op program at a research-intensive university, with more than 70% of students gaining up to two years of employment experience during their studies, Watford credits the University of Waterloo for being able to apply his learning to this real-world problem.

"The research doesn't end with being able to predict drought," he says. "It is an evolving tool that will help people and save lives."

More information: Andrew Watford et al, Dynamical systems-inspired machine learning methods for drought prediction, Ecological Informatics (2024).

Citation: Utilizing AI for drought prediction in Kenya (2025, February 21) retrieved 10 September 2025 from /news/2025-02-ai-drought-kenya.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Using techniques from astrophysics, researchers can forecast drought up to ten weeks ahead

0 shares

Feedback to editors