Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture

This book illustrates the World Bank’s commitment to assist countries to respond to the opportunities and challenges posed by climate change. Undertaken in collaborative partnership with policy makers, farmers, civil society, and other stakeholders in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, it provides a much needed response to the call for action by quantifying the impact and identifying key priorities for policies, programs, and investments to reduce the vulnerability of agricultural systems to climate change in the South Caucasus. The study responds to the urgent need for climate adaptation, as highlighted in the World Bank’s “Turn Down the Heat” report. Notably, the South Caucasus is already contending with increasing aridity and more frequent extreme weather events (e.g. severe droughts, floods and hailstorms). It presents practical solutions for a more climate smart agriculture, at the regional, national and agro-ecological zone level in each country. The recommendations offered in this book are a compilation of the results of the three national studies, and highlight the need and potential for regional collaborative action to increase benefits, while also continuing to emphasize the need for an effective response at the national level. The national level results are supported by country reports, which provide more details. This work is but an important beginning. To achieve the goals of climate resilience in the agriculture sector, more work is needed to translate the proposals into reality. The analysis demonstrates that investments in irrigation infrastructure and on-farm technologies have great potential to raise agricultural productivity and improve the climate resilience of the sector. Demand-side agricultural water management will have high short-term payoffs, and these short-term payoffs are complementary to the success of long- term irrigation, drainage and other infrastructure investments. Strengthening the disaster risk management strategies (beyond agricultural measures) are also needed to help mitigate household risks from extreme events, especially for the poorest, who are the most vulnerable.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ahouissoussi, Nicolas, Neumann, James E., Srivastava, Jitendra P.
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2014-04-23
Subjects:South Caucasus, adaptation to climate change, agriculture, agriculture risk reduction, climate change, climate resilience, environment, rural development,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18033
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spelling dig-okr-10986180332021-04-23T14:03:41Z Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture Ahouissoussi, Nicolas Neumann, James E. Srivastava, Jitendra P. Ahouissoussi, Nicolas Neumann, James E. Srivastava, Jitendra P. South Caucasus adaptation to climate change agriculture agriculture risk reduction climate change climate resilience environment rural development This book illustrates the World Bank’s commitment to assist countries to respond to the opportunities and challenges posed by climate change. Undertaken in collaborative partnership with policy makers, farmers, civil society, and other stakeholders in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, it provides a much needed response to the call for action by quantifying the impact and identifying key priorities for policies, programs, and investments to reduce the vulnerability of agricultural systems to climate change in the South Caucasus. The study responds to the urgent need for climate adaptation, as highlighted in the World Bank’s “Turn Down the Heat” report. Notably, the South Caucasus is already contending with increasing aridity and more frequent extreme weather events (e.g. severe droughts, floods and hailstorms). It presents practical solutions for a more climate smart agriculture, at the regional, national and agro-ecological zone level in each country. The recommendations offered in this book are a compilation of the results of the three national studies, and highlight the need and potential for regional collaborative action to increase benefits, while also continuing to emphasize the need for an effective response at the national level. The national level results are supported by country reports, which provide more details. This work is but an important beginning. To achieve the goals of climate resilience in the agriculture sector, more work is needed to translate the proposals into reality. The analysis demonstrates that investments in irrigation infrastructure and on-farm technologies have great potential to raise agricultural productivity and improve the climate resilience of the sector. Demand-side agricultural water management will have high short-term payoffs, and these short-term payoffs are complementary to the success of long- term irrigation, drainage and other infrastructure investments. Strengthening the disaster risk management strategies (beyond agricultural measures) are also needed to help mitigate household risks from extreme events, especially for the poorest, who are the most vulnerable. 2014-04-24T16:15:41Z 2014-04-24T16:15:41Z 2014-04-23 978-1-4648-0214-0 10.1596/978-1-4648-0214-0 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18033 en_US Directions in Development--Agriculture and Rural Development; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Europe and Central Asia Armenia Azerbaijan Azerbaijan Georgia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic South Caucasus
adaptation to climate change
agriculture
agriculture risk reduction
climate change
climate resilience
environment
rural development
South Caucasus
adaptation to climate change
agriculture
agriculture risk reduction
climate change
climate resilience
environment
rural development
spellingShingle South Caucasus
adaptation to climate change
agriculture
agriculture risk reduction
climate change
climate resilience
environment
rural development
South Caucasus
adaptation to climate change
agriculture
agriculture risk reduction
climate change
climate resilience
environment
rural development
Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
Neumann, James E.
Srivastava, Jitendra P.
Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
description This book illustrates the World Bank’s commitment to assist countries to respond to the opportunities and challenges posed by climate change. Undertaken in collaborative partnership with policy makers, farmers, civil society, and other stakeholders in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, it provides a much needed response to the call for action by quantifying the impact and identifying key priorities for policies, programs, and investments to reduce the vulnerability of agricultural systems to climate change in the South Caucasus. The study responds to the urgent need for climate adaptation, as highlighted in the World Bank’s “Turn Down the Heat” report. Notably, the South Caucasus is already contending with increasing aridity and more frequent extreme weather events (e.g. severe droughts, floods and hailstorms). It presents practical solutions for a more climate smart agriculture, at the regional, national and agro-ecological zone level in each country. The recommendations offered in this book are a compilation of the results of the three national studies, and highlight the need and potential for regional collaborative action to increase benefits, while also continuing to emphasize the need for an effective response at the national level. The national level results are supported by country reports, which provide more details. This work is but an important beginning. To achieve the goals of climate resilience in the agriculture sector, more work is needed to translate the proposals into reality. The analysis demonstrates that investments in irrigation infrastructure and on-farm technologies have great potential to raise agricultural productivity and improve the climate resilience of the sector. Demand-side agricultural water management will have high short-term payoffs, and these short-term payoffs are complementary to the success of long- term irrigation, drainage and other infrastructure investments. Strengthening the disaster risk management strategies (beyond agricultural measures) are also needed to help mitigate household risks from extreme events, especially for the poorest, who are the most vulnerable.
author2 Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
author_facet Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
Neumann, James E.
Srivastava, Jitendra P.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
topic_facet South Caucasus
adaptation to climate change
agriculture
agriculture risk reduction
climate change
climate resilience
environment
rural development
author Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
Neumann, James E.
Srivastava, Jitendra P.
author_sort Ahouissoussi, Nicolas
title Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
title_short Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
title_full Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
title_fullStr Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Building Resilience to Climate Change in South Caucasus Agriculture
title_sort building resilience to climate change in south caucasus agriculture
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2014-04-23
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18033
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