Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal

The recent progresses to predict climate fluctuations several months in advance by using statistical or dynamical models, suggest opportunity to improve the management of climatic risk in agriculture. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the potential benetits farmers can gain from seasonal predictions. To do so, we developed a simple bioeconomic model of a typical community in the semi-arid areas of Senegal. The model is used to simulate the decisions of farmers with a priori information on the quality of the rainy season. We first evaluate academically the potential benefits of a perfect prediction scheme then show how these benefits are affected by the decrease of the skill. Then, we evaluate the potential benetits of several widely-used prediction schemes: a statistical scheme based on the relationships between sea surface temperatures and rainfall and the dynamical predictions of DEMETER. The results show that predicting dry seasons is much more useful than predicting the wet ones. lndeed, on one hand the adoption of a wet forecast exposes the farmers to a high risk of failure in case of imperfect forecast by favoring cash crops such as maize and groundnut that are highly vulnerable to drought. On the other hand, the response to a dry forecast minimizes the climate risk by favoring robust crops such as millet and sorghum. We found a slightly similar skill and economic value of the statistical and dynamical forecast methods by considering the saine leadtime and the same 3 1-years hindeast period 1970-1000. The two methods would have been beneficial for farmers over this 31-years period while using only the dry years forecasts with an increase of income of 13.75%, for the statistical model and 9.58% for the bias-corrected DEMETER multi-model-ensemble mean.

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Main Authors: Sultan, Benjamin, Barbier, Bruno, Fortilus, Jeanne, Mbaye, Serigne Modou, Leclerc, Grégoire
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: AMMA International
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/1/607393.pdf
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-6073932023-12-13T10:11:39Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/ Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal. Sultan Benjamin, Barbier Bruno, Fortilus Jeanne, Mbaye Serigne Modou, Leclerc Grégoire. 2009. In : African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses, 3rd International Conference, Ouagadougou, 20-24 July 2009: Abstracts. Devic Marie-Pierre (ed.), Roussot Odile (ed.), Janicot Serge (ed.), Thorncroft Chris (ed.). Toulouse : AMMA International, Résumé, p. 429. International Conférence African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses. 3, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 20 Juillet 2009/24 Juillet 2009. Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal Sultan, Benjamin Barbier, Bruno Fortilus, Jeanne Mbaye, Serigne Modou Leclerc, Grégoire eng 2009 AMMA International African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses, 3rd International Conference, Ouagadougou, 20-24 July 2009: Abstracts The recent progresses to predict climate fluctuations several months in advance by using statistical or dynamical models, suggest opportunity to improve the management of climatic risk in agriculture. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the potential benetits farmers can gain from seasonal predictions. To do so, we developed a simple bioeconomic model of a typical community in the semi-arid areas of Senegal. The model is used to simulate the decisions of farmers with a priori information on the quality of the rainy season. We first evaluate academically the potential benefits of a perfect prediction scheme then show how these benefits are affected by the decrease of the skill. Then, we evaluate the potential benetits of several widely-used prediction schemes: a statistical scheme based on the relationships between sea surface temperatures and rainfall and the dynamical predictions of DEMETER. The results show that predicting dry seasons is much more useful than predicting the wet ones. lndeed, on one hand the adoption of a wet forecast exposes the farmers to a high risk of failure in case of imperfect forecast by favoring cash crops such as maize and groundnut that are highly vulnerable to drought. On the other hand, the response to a dry forecast minimizes the climate risk by favoring robust crops such as millet and sorghum. We found a slightly similar skill and economic value of the statistical and dynamical forecast methods by considering the saine leadtime and the same 3 1-years hindeast period 1970-1000. The two methods would have been beneficial for farmers over this 31-years period while using only the dry years forecasts with an increase of income of 13.75%, for the statistical model and 9.58% for the bias-corrected DEMETER multi-model-ensemble mean. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/1/607393.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html https://catalogue-bibliotheques.cirad.fr/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=222547
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libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
description The recent progresses to predict climate fluctuations several months in advance by using statistical or dynamical models, suggest opportunity to improve the management of climatic risk in agriculture. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the potential benetits farmers can gain from seasonal predictions. To do so, we developed a simple bioeconomic model of a typical community in the semi-arid areas of Senegal. The model is used to simulate the decisions of farmers with a priori information on the quality of the rainy season. We first evaluate academically the potential benefits of a perfect prediction scheme then show how these benefits are affected by the decrease of the skill. Then, we evaluate the potential benetits of several widely-used prediction schemes: a statistical scheme based on the relationships between sea surface temperatures and rainfall and the dynamical predictions of DEMETER. The results show that predicting dry seasons is much more useful than predicting the wet ones. lndeed, on one hand the adoption of a wet forecast exposes the farmers to a high risk of failure in case of imperfect forecast by favoring cash crops such as maize and groundnut that are highly vulnerable to drought. On the other hand, the response to a dry forecast minimizes the climate risk by favoring robust crops such as millet and sorghum. We found a slightly similar skill and economic value of the statistical and dynamical forecast methods by considering the saine leadtime and the same 3 1-years hindeast period 1970-1000. The two methods would have been beneficial for farmers over this 31-years period while using only the dry years forecasts with an increase of income of 13.75%, for the statistical model and 9.58% for the bias-corrected DEMETER multi-model-ensemble mean.
format conference_item
author Sultan, Benjamin
Barbier, Bruno
Fortilus, Jeanne
Mbaye, Serigne Modou
Leclerc, Grégoire
spellingShingle Sultan, Benjamin
Barbier, Bruno
Fortilus, Jeanne
Mbaye, Serigne Modou
Leclerc, Grégoire
Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
author_facet Sultan, Benjamin
Barbier, Bruno
Fortilus, Jeanne
Mbaye, Serigne Modou
Leclerc, Grégoire
author_sort Sultan, Benjamin
title Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
title_short Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
title_full Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
title_fullStr Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in West Africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in Senegal
title_sort estimating the potential economic value of the seasonal forecasts in west africa: a long-term ex-ante assessment in senegal
publisher AMMA International
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/607393/1/607393.pdf
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