Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change

The impacts of climate change are expected to be generally detrimental for agriculture in many parts of Africa. Overall, warming and drying may reduce crop yields by 10–20% to 2050, but there are places where losses are likely to be much more severe. Increasing frequencies of heat stress, drought and flooding events will result in yet further deleterious effects on crop and livestock productivity. There will be places in the coming decades where the livelihood strategies of rural people may need to change, to preserve food security and provide income-generating options. These are likely to include areas of Africa that are already marginal for crop production; as these become increasingly marginal, then livestock may provide an alternative to cropping. We carried out some analysis to identify areas in sub-Saharan Africa where such transitions might occur. For the currently cropped areas (which already include the highland areas where cropping intensity may increase in the future), we estimated probabilities of failed seasons for current climate conditions, and compared these with estimates obtained for future climate conditions in 2050, using downscaled climate model output for a higher and a lower greenhouse-gas emission scenario. Transition zones can be identified where the increased probabilities of failed seasons may induce shifts from cropping to increased dependence on livestock. These zones are characterised in terms of existing agricultural system, current livestock densities, and levels of poverty. The analysis provides further evidence that climate change impacts in the marginal cropping lands may be severe, where poverty rates are already high. Results also suggest that those likely to be more affected are already more poor, on average. We discuss the implications of these results in a research-for-development targeting context that is likely to see the poor disproportionately and negatively affected by climate change.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jones, Peter G., Thornton, Philip K.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2009-06
Subjects:poverty, farming systems,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/272
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2008.08.006
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-272
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-2722023-12-08T19:36:04Z Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change Jones, Peter G. Thornton, Philip K. poverty farming systems The impacts of climate change are expected to be generally detrimental for agriculture in many parts of Africa. Overall, warming and drying may reduce crop yields by 10–20% to 2050, but there are places where losses are likely to be much more severe. Increasing frequencies of heat stress, drought and flooding events will result in yet further deleterious effects on crop and livestock productivity. There will be places in the coming decades where the livelihood strategies of rural people may need to change, to preserve food security and provide income-generating options. These are likely to include areas of Africa that are already marginal for crop production; as these become increasingly marginal, then livestock may provide an alternative to cropping. We carried out some analysis to identify areas in sub-Saharan Africa where such transitions might occur. For the currently cropped areas (which already include the highland areas where cropping intensity may increase in the future), we estimated probabilities of failed seasons for current climate conditions, and compared these with estimates obtained for future climate conditions in 2050, using downscaled climate model output for a higher and a lower greenhouse-gas emission scenario. Transition zones can be identified where the increased probabilities of failed seasons may induce shifts from cropping to increased dependence on livestock. These zones are characterised in terms of existing agricultural system, current livestock densities, and levels of poverty. The analysis provides further evidence that climate change impacts in the marginal cropping lands may be severe, where poverty rates are already high. Results also suggest that those likely to be more affected are already more poor, on average. We discuss the implications of these results in a research-for-development targeting context that is likely to see the poor disproportionately and negatively affected by climate change. 2009-06 2009-12-28T12:11:38Z 2009-12-28T12:11:38Z Journal Article Jones, P.G.; Thornton, P.K. 2008. Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change. Environmental Science & Policy. 12(4): 427-437 1462-9011 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/272 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2008.08.006 en Copyrighted; all rights reserved p. 427-437 Elsevier Environmental Science and Policy
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic poverty
farming systems
poverty
farming systems
spellingShingle poverty
farming systems
poverty
farming systems
Jones, Peter G.
Thornton, Philip K.
Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
description The impacts of climate change are expected to be generally detrimental for agriculture in many parts of Africa. Overall, warming and drying may reduce crop yields by 10–20% to 2050, but there are places where losses are likely to be much more severe. Increasing frequencies of heat stress, drought and flooding events will result in yet further deleterious effects on crop and livestock productivity. There will be places in the coming decades where the livelihood strategies of rural people may need to change, to preserve food security and provide income-generating options. These are likely to include areas of Africa that are already marginal for crop production; as these become increasingly marginal, then livestock may provide an alternative to cropping. We carried out some analysis to identify areas in sub-Saharan Africa where such transitions might occur. For the currently cropped areas (which already include the highland areas where cropping intensity may increase in the future), we estimated probabilities of failed seasons for current climate conditions, and compared these with estimates obtained for future climate conditions in 2050, using downscaled climate model output for a higher and a lower greenhouse-gas emission scenario. Transition zones can be identified where the increased probabilities of failed seasons may induce shifts from cropping to increased dependence on livestock. These zones are characterised in terms of existing agricultural system, current livestock densities, and levels of poverty. The analysis provides further evidence that climate change impacts in the marginal cropping lands may be severe, where poverty rates are already high. Results also suggest that those likely to be more affected are already more poor, on average. We discuss the implications of these results in a research-for-development targeting context that is likely to see the poor disproportionately and negatively affected by climate change.
format Journal Article
topic_facet poverty
farming systems
author Jones, Peter G.
Thornton, Philip K.
author_facet Jones, Peter G.
Thornton, Philip K.
author_sort Jones, Peter G.
title Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
title_short Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
title_full Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
title_fullStr Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
title_full_unstemmed Croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in Africa due to climate change
title_sort croppers to livestock keepers: livelihood transitions to 2050 in africa due to climate change
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2009-06
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/272
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2008.08.006
work_keys_str_mv AT jonespeterg cropperstolivestockkeeperslivelihoodtransitionsto2050inafricaduetoclimatechange
AT thorntonphilipk cropperstolivestockkeeperslivelihoodtransitionsto2050inafricaduetoclimatechange
_version_ 1787228929018298368