Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones
This paper quantifies how African farmers have adapted their crop and irrigation decisions to their farm's current agro-ecological zone. The results indicate that farmers carefully consider the climate and other conditions of their farm when...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/04/9365682/differential-adaptation-strategies-climate-change-african-cropland-agro-ecological-zones http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6750 |
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okr-10986-67502021-04-23T14:02:31Z Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones Seo, Niggol Mendelsohn, Robert Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep Dinar, Ariel Hassan, Rashid AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS ALTERNATIVE CROPS ARID ZONE CHOICE OF CROPS CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGES CLIMATE MODELS CLIMATE VARIABLES CLIMATIC CHANGE CROP CROP PRICES CROPLAND CROPS CULTIVATION DESERTS ECOLOGICAL ZONE ECOLOGICAL ZONES ELECTRICITY EVAPOTRANSPIRATION FAO FARM FARM LAND FARMER FARMERS FARMS FORESTRY FORESTS FRUITS GLOBAL WARMING GREENHOUSE EFFECT GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROUNDNUT GROWING SEASON HOUSEHOLD SIZE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE IPCC IRRIGATION LATIN AMERICAN LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT MAIZE MILLET NUTS PLANTING POOR COUNTRIES POTENTIAL IMPACTS PRECIPITATION RAINFALL RAINFED AGRICULTURE SAHARA SINGLE CROP SOIL SOIL TYPES SOILS SORGHUM SOUTH AMERICAN SPACING SPRING TEMPERATURE TEMPERATURE DATA VEGETABLES VULNERABLE SECTORS WARMER CLIMATES WATER AVAILABILITY WHEAT YIELDS This paper quantifies how African farmers have adapted their crop and irrigation decisions to their farm's current agro-ecological zone. The results indicate that farmers carefully consider the climate and other conditions of their farm when making these choices. These results are then used to forecast how farmers might change their irrigation and crop choice decisions if climate changes. The model predicts African farmers would adopt irrigation more often under a very hot and dry climate scenario but less often with a mild and wet scenario. However, farms in the deserts, lowland humid forest, or mid elevation humid forest would reduce irrigation even in the very hot and dry climate scenario. Area under fruits and vegetables would increase Africa-wide with the very hot and dry climate scenario, except in the lowland semi-arid agro-ecological zone. Millet would increase overall under the mild and wet scenario, but decline substantially in the lowland dry savannah and lowland semi-arid agro-ecological zones. Maize would be chosen less often across all the agro-ecological zones under both climate scenarios. Wheat would decrease across Africa. The authors recommend that care must be taken to match adaptations to local conditions because the optimal adaptation would depend on the agro-ecological zone and the climate scenario. 2012-05-31T15:47:41Z 2012-05-31T15:47:41Z 2008-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/04/9365682/differential-adaptation-strategies-climate-change-african-cropland-agro-ecological-zones http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6750 English Policy Research Working Paper No. 4600 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS ALTERNATIVE CROPS ARID ZONE CHOICE OF CROPS CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGES CLIMATE MODELS CLIMATE VARIABLES CLIMATIC CHANGE CROP CROP PRICES CROPLAND CROPS CULTIVATION DESERTS ECOLOGICAL ZONE ECOLOGICAL ZONES ELECTRICITY EVAPOTRANSPIRATION FAO FARM FARM LAND FARMER FARMERS FARMS FORESTRY FORESTS FRUITS GLOBAL WARMING GREENHOUSE EFFECT GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROUNDNUT GROWING SEASON HOUSEHOLD SIZE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE IPCC IRRIGATION LATIN AMERICAN LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT MAIZE MILLET NUTS PLANTING POOR COUNTRIES POTENTIAL IMPACTS PRECIPITATION RAINFALL RAINFED AGRICULTURE SAHARA SINGLE CROP SOIL SOIL TYPES SOILS SORGHUM SOUTH AMERICAN SPACING SPRING TEMPERATURE TEMPERATURE DATA VEGETABLES VULNERABLE SECTORS WARMER CLIMATES WATER AVAILABILITY WHEAT YIELDS |
spellingShingle |
AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS ALTERNATIVE CROPS ARID ZONE CHOICE OF CROPS CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGES CLIMATE MODELS CLIMATE VARIABLES CLIMATIC CHANGE CROP CROP PRICES CROPLAND CROPS CULTIVATION DESERTS ECOLOGICAL ZONE ECOLOGICAL ZONES ELECTRICITY EVAPOTRANSPIRATION FAO FARM FARM LAND FARMER FARMERS FARMS FORESTRY FORESTS FRUITS GLOBAL WARMING GREENHOUSE EFFECT GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROUNDNUT GROWING SEASON HOUSEHOLD SIZE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE IPCC IRRIGATION LATIN AMERICAN LIVESTOCK MANAGEMENT MAIZE MILLET NUTS PLANTING POOR COUNTRIES POTENTIAL IMPACTS PRECIPITATION RAINFALL RAINFED AGRICULTURE SAHARA SINGLE CROP SOIL SOIL TYPES SOILS SORGHUM SOUTH AMERICAN SPACING SPRING TEMPERATURE TEMPERATURE DATA VEGETABLES VULNERABLE SECTORS WARMER CLIMATES WATER AVAILABILITY WHEAT YIELDS Seo, Niggol Mendelsohn, Robert Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep Dinar, Ariel Hassan, Rashid Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper No. 4600 |
description |
This paper quantifies how African
farmers have adapted their crop and irrigation decisions to
their farm's current agro-ecological zone. The results
indicate that farmers carefully consider the climate and
other conditions of their farm when making these choices.
These results are then used to forecast how farmers might
change their irrigation and crop choice decisions if climate
changes. The model predicts African farmers would adopt
irrigation more often under a very hot and dry climate
scenario but less often with a mild and wet scenario.
However, farms in the deserts, lowland humid forest, or mid
elevation humid forest would reduce irrigation even in the
very hot and dry climate scenario. Area under fruits and
vegetables would increase Africa-wide with the very hot and
dry climate scenario, except in the lowland semi-arid
agro-ecological zone. Millet would increase overall under
the mild and wet scenario, but decline substantially in the
lowland dry savannah and lowland semi-arid agro-ecological
zones. Maize would be chosen less often across all the
agro-ecological zones under both climate scenarios. Wheat
would decrease across Africa. The authors recommend that
care must be taken to match adaptations to local conditions
because the optimal adaptation would depend on the
agro-ecological zone and the climate scenario. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Seo, Niggol Mendelsohn, Robert Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep Dinar, Ariel Hassan, Rashid |
author_facet |
Seo, Niggol Mendelsohn, Robert Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep Dinar, Ariel Hassan, Rashid |
author_sort |
Seo, Niggol |
title |
Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
title_short |
Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
title_full |
Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
title_fullStr |
Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
title_full_unstemmed |
Differential Adaptation Strategies to Climate Change in African Cropland by Agro-Ecological Zones |
title_sort |
differential adaptation strategies to climate change in african cropland by agro-ecological zones |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/04/9365682/differential-adaptation-strategies-climate-change-african-cropland-agro-ecological-zones http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6750 |
_version_ |
1764400804464164864 |