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Bibliothèque Climate Smart Agriculture in the African Context

Climate Smart Agriculture in the African Context

Climate Smart Agriculture in the African Context

Resource information

Date of publication
Novembre 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
handle:10568/68944
License of the resource

Agriculture remains vital to the economy of most African countries and its development

has significant implications for food security and poverty reduction in the region. Increase

in agricultural production over the past decades has mainly been due to land area expansion,

with very little change in production techniques and limited improvement in yields.

Currently one in four people remains malnourished in Africa. CSA integrates all three dimensions of sustainable development and is aimed at (1)

sustainably increasing agricultural productivity and incomes; (2) adapting and building

resilience to climate change from the farm to national levels; and (3) developing

opportunities to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture compared with past

trends. It is an approach to identify the most suitable strategies according to national and

local priorities and conditions to meet these three objectives. There is no such thing as an

agricultural practice that is climate smart per se. Whether or not a particular practice or

production system is climate smart depends upon the particular local climatic, biophysical,

socio-economic and development context, which determines how far a particular practice

or system can deliver on productivity increase, resilience and mitigation benefits. For Africa to reap the potential benefits CSA, concrete actions must be taken to: enhance

the evidence base to underpin strategic choices, promote and facilitate wider adoption by

farmers of appropriate technologies; develop institutional arrangements to support, apply

and scale-out CSA from the farm level to the agricultural landscape level; manage tradeoffs

in perspectives of farmers and policymakers; strengthen technical, analytical and

implementation capacities; ensure policy frameworks and public investments are

supportive of CSA; develop and implement effective risk-sharing schemes.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Kinyangi, James
Nyasimi, Mary
Mul M
Mapfumo P
Speranza CI
Partey, Samuel T.
Amwata, D
Cofie, Olufunke O.
Zougmoré, Robert B.
Williams, Timothy O.
Wamukoya, George
Frid-Nielsen, Snorre
Rosenstock, Todd S.
Girvetz, Evan H.
Campbell, Bruce M.

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