Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions

The paper examined the willingness of smallholder cassava processors to pay for value-added solid wastes management solutions in Nigeria. We employed a multistage sampling procedure to obtain primary data from 403 cassava processors from the forest and Guinea savannah zones of Nigeria. Contingent va...

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Main Authors: Omilani, O., Abass, A., Okoruwa, V.O.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: MDPI 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101299
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author Omilani, O.
Abass, A.
Okoruwa, V.O.
author_browse Abass, A.
Okoruwa, V.O.
Omilani, O.
author_facet Omilani, O.
Abass, A.
Okoruwa, V.O.
author_sort Omilani, O.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The paper examined the willingness of smallholder cassava processors to pay for value-added solid wastes management solutions in Nigeria. We employed a multistage sampling procedure to obtain primary data from 403 cassava processors from the forest and Guinea savannah zones of Nigeria. Contingent valuation and logistic regression were used to determine the willingness of the processors to pay for improved waste management options and the factors influencing their decision on the type of waste management system adopted and willingness to pay for a value-added solid-waste management system option. Women constituted the largest population of smallholder cassava processors, and the processors generated a lot of solid waste (605–878 kg/processor/season). Waste was usually dumped (59.6%), given to others (58.1%), or sold in wet (27.8%) or dry (35.5%) forms. The factors influencing the processors’ decision on the type of waste management system to adopt included sex of processors, membership of an association, quantity of cassava processed and ownership structure. Whereas the processors were willing to pay for new training on improved waste management technologies, they were not willing to pay more than US$3. However, US$3 may be paid for training in mushroom production. It is expected that public expenditure on training to empower processors to use solid-waste conversion technologies for generating value-added products will lead to such social benefits as lower exposure to environmental toxins from the air, rivers and underground water, among others, and additional income for the smallholder processors. The output of the study can serve as the basis for developing usable and affordable solid-waste management systems for community cassava processing units in African countries involved in cassava production.
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spelling CGSpace1012992025-11-11T11:04:23Z Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions Omilani, O. Abass, A. Okoruwa, V.O. cassava smallholders solid wastes pollution value added willingness to pay The paper examined the willingness of smallholder cassava processors to pay for value-added solid wastes management solutions in Nigeria. We employed a multistage sampling procedure to obtain primary data from 403 cassava processors from the forest and Guinea savannah zones of Nigeria. Contingent valuation and logistic regression were used to determine the willingness of the processors to pay for improved waste management options and the factors influencing their decision on the type of waste management system adopted and willingness to pay for a value-added solid-waste management system option. Women constituted the largest population of smallholder cassava processors, and the processors generated a lot of solid waste (605–878 kg/processor/season). Waste was usually dumped (59.6%), given to others (58.1%), or sold in wet (27.8%) or dry (35.5%) forms. The factors influencing the processors’ decision on the type of waste management system to adopt included sex of processors, membership of an association, quantity of cassava processed and ownership structure. Whereas the processors were willing to pay for new training on improved waste management technologies, they were not willing to pay more than US$3. However, US$3 may be paid for training in mushroom production. It is expected that public expenditure on training to empower processors to use solid-waste conversion technologies for generating value-added products will lead to such social benefits as lower exposure to environmental toxins from the air, rivers and underground water, among others, and additional income for the smallholder processors. The output of the study can serve as the basis for developing usable and affordable solid-waste management systems for community cassava processing units in African countries involved in cassava production. 2019-03-23 2019-05-20T09:58:30Z 2019-05-20T09:58:30Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101299 en Open Access application/pdf MDPI Omilani, O., Abass, A. & Okoruwa, V.O. (2019). Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions. Sustainability, 11(6): 1759, 1-14.
spellingShingle cassava
smallholders
solid wastes
pollution
value added
willingness to pay
Omilani, O.
Abass, A.
Okoruwa, V.O.
Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title_full Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title_fullStr Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title_full_unstemmed Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title_short Smallholder agroprocessors' willingness to pay for value-added solid-waste management solutions
title_sort smallholder agroprocessors willingness to pay for value added solid waste management solutions
topic cassava
smallholders
solid wastes
pollution
value added
willingness to pay
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/101299
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AT abassa smallholderagroprocessorswillingnesstopayforvalueaddedsolidwastemanagementsolutions
AT okoruwavo smallholderagroprocessorswillingnesstopayforvalueaddedsolidwastemanagementsolutions