Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes
In Africa, particularly East Africa, more than 80% of the population depends on agriculture and the income generated from the sector that contributes about 30-40% to the regional Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (Adesina, 2019). Ethiopia is the second most populated country in Africa with 80% of them are living in rural areas (Sakketa, 2022). Studies showed that many families in Ethiopia are unable to produce the necessary amount of food and generate income for their own subsistence and food security (Devereux and Sussex, 2000). The high levels of poverty coupled with the high population pressure, land degradation, and water scarcity are increasing the vulnerability of the country to climate change (Tadesse et al, 2021). Ethiopia is among one of the countries in East Africa at disproportionately higher risk of adverse consequences of climate change (Zermoglio et. al., N.A). The country is extremely vulnerable to various climate change events, and it is considered a climate hotspot where climate change poses grave threats to human well-being and natural environments (Aid, 2018). Climate variability and change are having significant direct and indirect impacts on agricultural production, agricultural value chains, food, and nutrition security as well as the overall sustainable growth of the sector in Ethiopia (Gitz et. al., 2016). The number of rainy days in the country has decreased perceptibly, which increases dry spells by 0.8 days per decade, causing crop moisture stress during the growing season. The mean annual temperature has been warming at a rate of 0.12 to 0.54 oC per decade and it is expected to rise by 1.4 to 4.1 oC by 2080. Average annual temperatures nationwide are expected to rise 3.1°C by 2060, and 5.1°C by 2090 (Rovin et al, 2013).
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Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
2022-12-22
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Subjects: | agriculture, climate-smart agriculture, climate change, rehabilitation, landscape, |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126266 |
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dig-cgspace-10568-1262662023-09-15T12:18:30Z Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes Behute, Befekadu Ambaw, Gebermedihin Abera, Wuletawu Demeke, Getamesay Solomon, Dawit agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape In Africa, particularly East Africa, more than 80% of the population depends on agriculture and the income generated from the sector that contributes about 30-40% to the regional Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (Adesina, 2019). Ethiopia is the second most populated country in Africa with 80% of them are living in rural areas (Sakketa, 2022). Studies showed that many families in Ethiopia are unable to produce the necessary amount of food and generate income for their own subsistence and food security (Devereux and Sussex, 2000). The high levels of poverty coupled with the high population pressure, land degradation, and water scarcity are increasing the vulnerability of the country to climate change (Tadesse et al, 2021). Ethiopia is among one of the countries in East Africa at disproportionately higher risk of adverse consequences of climate change (Zermoglio et. al., N.A). The country is extremely vulnerable to various climate change events, and it is considered a climate hotspot where climate change poses grave threats to human well-being and natural environments (Aid, 2018). Climate variability and change are having significant direct and indirect impacts on agricultural production, agricultural value chains, food, and nutrition security as well as the overall sustainable growth of the sector in Ethiopia (Gitz et. al., 2016). The number of rainy days in the country has decreased perceptibly, which increases dry spells by 0.8 days per decade, causing crop moisture stress during the growing season. The mean annual temperature has been warming at a rate of 0.12 to 0.54 oC per decade and it is expected to rise by 1.4 to 4.1 oC by 2080. Average annual temperatures nationwide are expected to rise 3.1°C by 2060, and 5.1°C by 2090 (Rovin et al, 2013). 2022-12-22 2022-12-22T15:31:30Z 2022-12-22T15:31:30Z Report Behute B, Ambaw G, Abera W, Demeke G, Solomon D. 2022. Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes. AICCRA Technical Report. Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research in Africa (AICCRA). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126266 en CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access 32 p. application/pdf Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa |
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agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape |
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agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape Behute, Befekadu Ambaw, Gebermedihin Abera, Wuletawu Demeke, Getamesay Solomon, Dawit Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
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In Africa, particularly East Africa, more than 80% of the population depends on agriculture and the income generated from the sector that contributes about 30-40% to the regional Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (Adesina, 2019). Ethiopia is the second most populated country in Africa with 80% of them are living in rural areas (Sakketa, 2022). Studies showed that many families in
Ethiopia are unable to produce the necessary amount of food and generate income for their own subsistence and food security (Devereux and Sussex, 2000). The high levels of poverty coupled with the high population pressure, land degradation, and water scarcity are increasing the vulnerability of the country to climate change (Tadesse et al, 2021). Ethiopia is among one of the countries in East Africa at disproportionately higher risk of adverse consequences of climate change (Zermoglio et. al., N.A). The country is extremely vulnerable to various climate change events, and it is considered a climate hotspot where climate change
poses grave threats to human well-being and natural environments (Aid, 2018). Climate variability and change are having significant direct and indirect impacts on agricultural production, agricultural value chains, food, and nutrition security as well as the overall sustainable growth of the sector in Ethiopia (Gitz et. al., 2016). The number of rainy days in the country has decreased perceptibly, which increases dry spells by 0.8 days per decade, causing crop moisture stress during the growing season. The mean annual temperature has been warming at a rate of 0.12 to 0.54 oC per decade and it is expected to rise by 1.4 to 4.1 oC by 2080. Average annual temperatures nationwide are expected to rise 3.1°C by 2060, and 5.1°C by 2090 (Rovin et al, 2013). |
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Report |
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agriculture climate-smart agriculture climate change rehabilitation landscape |
author |
Behute, Befekadu Ambaw, Gebermedihin Abera, Wuletawu Demeke, Getamesay Solomon, Dawit |
author_facet |
Behute, Befekadu Ambaw, Gebermedihin Abera, Wuletawu Demeke, Getamesay Solomon, Dawit |
author_sort |
Behute, Befekadu |
title |
Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
title_short |
Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
title_full |
Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
title_fullStr |
Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Satisfaction with the Accessibility and Usefulness of Bundled CSA Practices for Rehabilitation of Degraded Landscapes |
title_sort |
satisfaction with the accessibility and usefulness of bundled csa practices for rehabilitation of degraded landscapes |
publisher |
Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa |
publishDate |
2022-12-22 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126266 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT behutebefekadu satisfactionwiththeaccessibilityandusefulnessofbundledcsapracticesforrehabilitationofdegradedlandscapes AT ambawgebermedihin satisfactionwiththeaccessibilityandusefulnessofbundledcsapracticesforrehabilitationofdegradedlandscapes AT aberawuletawu satisfactionwiththeaccessibilityandusefulnessofbundledcsapracticesforrehabilitationofdegradedlandscapes AT demekegetamesay satisfactionwiththeaccessibilityandusefulnessofbundledcsapracticesforrehabilitationofdegradedlandscapes AT solomondawit satisfactionwiththeaccessibilityandusefulnessofbundledcsapracticesforrehabilitationofdegradedlandscapes |
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1779053842354143232 |