Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change

This paper presents a synthesis related to the assessment of climate change and its impacts on productivity of staple crops in Papua New Guinea (PNG), paying close attention to the change in population in the next 80 years. As much as the changes in the climatic and environmental factors will affect...

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Main Author: Patrick S. Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sebelas Maret University 2020-06-01
Series:Sains Tanah: Journal of Soil Science and Agroclimatology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.uns.ac.id/tanah/article/view/41545
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spelling doaj-a743df63ff2e4c85828c12281e39019d2020-11-25T03:22:08ZengSebelas Maret UniversitySains Tanah: Journal of Soil Science and Agroclimatology1412-36062356-14242020-06-01171789310.20961/stjssa.v17i1.4154527095Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate changePatrick S. Michael0Department of Agriculture, PNG University of TechnologyThis paper presents a synthesis related to the assessment of climate change and its impacts on productivity of staple crops in Papua New Guinea (PNG), paying close attention to the change in population in the next 80 years. As much as the changes in the climatic and environmental factors will affect agriculture, evidence available in the literature show increase in global and local population will put additional pressure on agriculture by competing with available land and other resources that support agricultural productivity. The developing and underdeveloped countries are considered to be largely vulnerable as more than 85% of the people depend on subsistence agriculture for rural livelihood. This synthesis showed more than 60–85% of the rural people in PNG depend on sweet potato, banana, Colocasia taro, and greater yam. Projection of the population showed there will be 22–31 million people by 2100 and will depend on narrow staple-based subsistence agriculture. The population projected means the density will be 42 people per km2, putting more pressure on limited land available. When that happens, PNG will not be prepared to mitigate, be resilient and adapt because of poor infrastructure, no development plans and lack of post-harvest technologies for loss management of the staples, most of which are root and tuber crops.https://jurnal.uns.ac.id/tanah/article/view/41545climate changepopulation increaserural developmentstaple-based agriculture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick S. Michael
spellingShingle Patrick S. Michael
Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
Sains Tanah: Journal of Soil Science and Agroclimatology
climate change
population increase
rural development
staple-based agriculture
author_facet Patrick S. Michael
author_sort Patrick S. Michael
title Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
title_short Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
title_full Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
title_fullStr Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
title_full_unstemmed Agriculture versus climate change – A narrow staple-based rural livelihood of Papua New Guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
title_sort agriculture versus climate change – a narrow staple-based rural livelihood of papua new guinea is a threat to survival under climate change
publisher Sebelas Maret University
series Sains Tanah: Journal of Soil Science and Agroclimatology
issn 1412-3606
2356-1424
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This paper presents a synthesis related to the assessment of climate change and its impacts on productivity of staple crops in Papua New Guinea (PNG), paying close attention to the change in population in the next 80 years. As much as the changes in the climatic and environmental factors will affect agriculture, evidence available in the literature show increase in global and local population will put additional pressure on agriculture by competing with available land and other resources that support agricultural productivity. The developing and underdeveloped countries are considered to be largely vulnerable as more than 85% of the people depend on subsistence agriculture for rural livelihood. This synthesis showed more than 60–85% of the rural people in PNG depend on sweet potato, banana, Colocasia taro, and greater yam. Projection of the population showed there will be 22–31 million people by 2100 and will depend on narrow staple-based subsistence agriculture. The population projected means the density will be 42 people per km2, putting more pressure on limited land available. When that happens, PNG will not be prepared to mitigate, be resilient and adapt because of poor infrastructure, no development plans and lack of post-harvest technologies for loss management of the staples, most of which are root and tuber crops.
topic climate change
population increase
rural development
staple-based agriculture
url https://jurnal.uns.ac.id/tanah/article/view/41545
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