Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya

Research on and disseminating Climate Smart Agricultural (CSA) practices has led to increased awareness and farmers’ capacity to develop resilient agricultural production systems for sustainable livelihoods and food security while addressing climate change adaptation and mitigation. Thus, there is a potential in gaining valuable insight into how Irish potato smallholder farmers should respond to current and future climate risks. However, studies exploring and linking expert opinion on synergies and trade-offs in adapting the CSA practices are limited. This study integrated qualitative and quantitative data from 22 expert surveys and semi-structured questionnaires to answer the following objectives: 1) Which top five CSA practices are currently used by Irish potato farmers and which ones are preferred by experts in response to climate change adaptation in Kenya? 2) How do the selected CSA practices perform in Irish potato farming in Kenya? 3) Which synergies and trade-offs occur upon implementation of these CSA practices? The study found that CSA practices most preferred by both experts and farmers are improved crop varieties, efficient use of agrochemicals, early land preparation, diversified crop production, efficient use of inorganic fertilizer, irrigation and changing planting dates. These selected CSA practices indicated the productivity pillar to be the best performing CSA pillar synergistically while trade-offs to occur across CSA pillars. These findings can inform different potato value chain stakeholders on the synergies and trade-off dynamics associated with adopting CSA practices for climate change adaptation. In conclusion, while CSA practices are perceived as essential, most preferred CSA practices are focused on increased production and adaptation, while mitigation goals receive less attention. The findings of this study provide an important basis for recommendation to farmers and policymakers. This study calls for sustainable and innovative ways that help to upscale the selected CSA practices in Irish potato farming in Kenya and beyond.

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Main Authors: Ogola, Robert John O., Ouko, Kevin Okoth
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Irish potato, Kenya, climate change, climate smart agriculture, synergies, trade-offs,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/synergies-and-trade-offs-of-selected-climate-smart-agriculture-pr
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5850932024-12-19 Ogola, Robert John O. Ouko, Kevin Okoth Article/Letter to editor Cogent Food and Agriculture 7 (2021) 1 ISSN: 2331-1932 Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya 2021 Research on and disseminating Climate Smart Agricultural (CSA) practices has led to increased awareness and farmers’ capacity to develop resilient agricultural production systems for sustainable livelihoods and food security while addressing climate change adaptation and mitigation. Thus, there is a potential in gaining valuable insight into how Irish potato smallholder farmers should respond to current and future climate risks. However, studies exploring and linking expert opinion on synergies and trade-offs in adapting the CSA practices are limited. This study integrated qualitative and quantitative data from 22 expert surveys and semi-structured questionnaires to answer the following objectives: 1) Which top five CSA practices are currently used by Irish potato farmers and which ones are preferred by experts in response to climate change adaptation in Kenya? 2) How do the selected CSA practices perform in Irish potato farming in Kenya? 3) Which synergies and trade-offs occur upon implementation of these CSA practices? The study found that CSA practices most preferred by both experts and farmers are improved crop varieties, efficient use of agrochemicals, early land preparation, diversified crop production, efficient use of inorganic fertilizer, irrigation and changing planting dates. These selected CSA practices indicated the productivity pillar to be the best performing CSA pillar synergistically while trade-offs to occur across CSA pillars. These findings can inform different potato value chain stakeholders on the synergies and trade-off dynamics associated with adopting CSA practices for climate change adaptation. In conclusion, while CSA practices are perceived as essential, most preferred CSA practices are focused on increased production and adaptation, while mitigation goals receive less attention. The findings of this study provide an important basis for recommendation to farmers and policymakers. This study calls for sustainable and innovative ways that help to upscale the selected CSA practices in Irish potato farming in Kenya and beyond. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/synergies-and-trade-offs-of-selected-climate-smart-agriculture-pr 10.1080/23311932.2021.1948257 https://edepot.wur.nl/550849 Irish potato Kenya climate change climate smart agriculture synergies trade-offs https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Irish potato
Kenya
climate change
climate smart agriculture
synergies
trade-offs
Irish potato
Kenya
climate change
climate smart agriculture
synergies
trade-offs
spellingShingle Irish potato
Kenya
climate change
climate smart agriculture
synergies
trade-offs
Irish potato
Kenya
climate change
climate smart agriculture
synergies
trade-offs
Ogola, Robert John O.
Ouko, Kevin Okoth
Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
description Research on and disseminating Climate Smart Agricultural (CSA) practices has led to increased awareness and farmers’ capacity to develop resilient agricultural production systems for sustainable livelihoods and food security while addressing climate change adaptation and mitigation. Thus, there is a potential in gaining valuable insight into how Irish potato smallholder farmers should respond to current and future climate risks. However, studies exploring and linking expert opinion on synergies and trade-offs in adapting the CSA practices are limited. This study integrated qualitative and quantitative data from 22 expert surveys and semi-structured questionnaires to answer the following objectives: 1) Which top five CSA practices are currently used by Irish potato farmers and which ones are preferred by experts in response to climate change adaptation in Kenya? 2) How do the selected CSA practices perform in Irish potato farming in Kenya? 3) Which synergies and trade-offs occur upon implementation of these CSA practices? The study found that CSA practices most preferred by both experts and farmers are improved crop varieties, efficient use of agrochemicals, early land preparation, diversified crop production, efficient use of inorganic fertilizer, irrigation and changing planting dates. These selected CSA practices indicated the productivity pillar to be the best performing CSA pillar synergistically while trade-offs to occur across CSA pillars. These findings can inform different potato value chain stakeholders on the synergies and trade-off dynamics associated with adopting CSA practices for climate change adaptation. In conclusion, while CSA practices are perceived as essential, most preferred CSA practices are focused on increased production and adaptation, while mitigation goals receive less attention. The findings of this study provide an important basis for recommendation to farmers and policymakers. This study calls for sustainable and innovative ways that help to upscale the selected CSA practices in Irish potato farming in Kenya and beyond.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Irish potato
Kenya
climate change
climate smart agriculture
synergies
trade-offs
author Ogola, Robert John O.
Ouko, Kevin Okoth
author_facet Ogola, Robert John O.
Ouko, Kevin Okoth
author_sort Ogola, Robert John O.
title Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
title_short Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
title_full Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
title_fullStr Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in Irish potato farming, Kenya
title_sort synergies and trade-offs of selected climate smart agriculture practices in irish potato farming, kenya
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/synergies-and-trade-offs-of-selected-climate-smart-agriculture-pr
work_keys_str_mv AT ogolarobertjohno synergiesandtradeoffsofselectedclimatesmartagriculturepracticesinirishpotatofarmingkenya
AT oukokevinokoth synergiesandtradeoffsofselectedclimatesmartagriculturepracticesinirishpotatofarmingkenya
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