Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa

Climate change is easily the most serious human and environmental crisis of the present generation. While awareness of the existence and consequences of climate change is becoming widespread, the specific effects on agriculture and the extent to which innovative climate-smart agriculture (CSA) pract...

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Main Authors: Ajuruchukwu Obi, Okuhle Maya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/12/6848
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spelling doaj-5a8ea36fb0f9490cb7c307cb6b9ad54e2021-07-01T00:25:45ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-06-01136848684810.3390/su13126848Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South AfricaAjuruchukwu Obi0Okuhle Maya1Department of Agricultural Economics & Extension, University of Fort Hare, Alice 5700, South AfricaDepartment of Agricultural Economics & Extension, University of Fort Hare, Alice 5700, South AfricaClimate change is easily the most serious human and environmental crisis of the present generation. While awareness of the existence and consequences of climate change is becoming widespread, the specific effects on agriculture and the extent to which innovative climate-smart agriculture (CSA) practices are being adopted remain unclear. This study was conducted in three local municipalities of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa to determine the patterns of smallholder choice of alternative climate-smart agricultural practices and the factors affecting such choices. It was particularly crucial to investigate why adaptation of CSA practices continues to be lower than expectation despite awareness of their benefits, thus highlighting the social and cultural limits to adaptation to climate change. A total of 210 households were enumerated on the basis of their involvement in crop and livestock farming. The data were analyzed by means of multinomial logistic model, which was applied separately to individual local municipality data sets and a combined provincial data set, and it was revealed that most farmers were not being sufficiently motivated to move from established practices to adopt new CSA practices. The most influential factors in the decision process as to what CSA practice to adopt were primary occupation, farming system type, household size, age and membership of farmer groups. It seemed that asset fixity constrained farmers to continue with existing practices rather than shift to new, more profitable practices, a situation that can be resolved by external intervention by government agencies and/or other entities. Awareness creation targeting remote rural areas as well as institutions to ease farmers’ access to credit and information will contribute to higher adoption rates, which are likely to lead to enhanced food security and standard of living for rural dwellers as their agricultural production and productivity improve.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/12/6848climate changeclimate-smart agriculturemultinomial logistic modelingsmallholdersadaptation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ajuruchukwu Obi
Okuhle Maya
spellingShingle Ajuruchukwu Obi
Okuhle Maya
Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
Sustainability
climate change
climate-smart agriculture
multinomial logistic modeling
smallholders
adaptation
author_facet Ajuruchukwu Obi
Okuhle Maya
author_sort Ajuruchukwu Obi
title Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
title_short Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
title_full Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
title_fullStr Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Innovative Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices in the Smallholder Farming System of South Africa
title_sort innovative climate-smart agriculture (csa) practices in the smallholder farming system of south africa
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Climate change is easily the most serious human and environmental crisis of the present generation. While awareness of the existence and consequences of climate change is becoming widespread, the specific effects on agriculture and the extent to which innovative climate-smart agriculture (CSA) practices are being adopted remain unclear. This study was conducted in three local municipalities of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa to determine the patterns of smallholder choice of alternative climate-smart agricultural practices and the factors affecting such choices. It was particularly crucial to investigate why adaptation of CSA practices continues to be lower than expectation despite awareness of their benefits, thus highlighting the social and cultural limits to adaptation to climate change. A total of 210 households were enumerated on the basis of their involvement in crop and livestock farming. The data were analyzed by means of multinomial logistic model, which was applied separately to individual local municipality data sets and a combined provincial data set, and it was revealed that most farmers were not being sufficiently motivated to move from established practices to adopt new CSA practices. The most influential factors in the decision process as to what CSA practice to adopt were primary occupation, farming system type, household size, age and membership of farmer groups. It seemed that asset fixity constrained farmers to continue with existing practices rather than shift to new, more profitable practices, a situation that can be resolved by external intervention by government agencies and/or other entities. Awareness creation targeting remote rural areas as well as institutions to ease farmers’ access to credit and information will contribute to higher adoption rates, which are likely to lead to enhanced food security and standard of living for rural dwellers as their agricultural production and productivity improve.
topic climate change
climate-smart agriculture
multinomial logistic modeling
smallholders
adaptation
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/12/6848
work_keys_str_mv AT ajuruchukwuobi innovativeclimatesmartagriculturecsapracticesinthesmallholderfarmingsystemofsouthafrica
AT okuhlemaya innovativeclimatesmartagriculturecsapracticesinthesmallholderfarmingsystemofsouthafrica
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