Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment

In Tanzania, sorghum is grown in almost all the semi-arid areas by subsistence farmers for food, feed, and beer. A total of 6.2 million ha is used for cereal crop production, of which 0.9 million ha (15%) is under sorghum cultivation (FAOSTAT 2017). The major growing regions include Dodoma, Singida,...

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Autores principales: Demissie, Teferi Dejene, Duku, Confidence, Groot, Annemarie, Kabuka, Godfrey, Recha, John W.M., Osumba, Joab J.L.
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107719
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author Demissie, Teferi Dejene
Duku, Confidence
Groot, Annemarie
Kabuka, Godfrey
Recha, John W.M.
Osumba, Joab J.L.
author_browse Demissie, Teferi Dejene
Duku, Confidence
Groot, Annemarie
Kabuka, Godfrey
Osumba, Joab J.L.
Recha, John W.M.
author_facet Demissie, Teferi Dejene
Duku, Confidence
Groot, Annemarie
Kabuka, Godfrey
Recha, John W.M.
Osumba, Joab J.L.
author_sort Demissie, Teferi Dejene
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Tanzania, sorghum is grown in almost all the semi-arid areas by subsistence farmers for food, feed, and beer. A total of 6.2 million ha is used for cereal crop production, of which 0.9 million ha (15%) is under sorghum cultivation (FAOSTAT 2017). The major growing regions include Dodoma, Singida, Simiyu, Shinyanga, Tabora, and Mwanza, which together produce 50% of the country's commercial sorghum output. The planting session in these areas commence from mid-November to February. Local varieties are planted by most smallholder farmers due to their affordability. The improved varieties are more costly and also not easily accessible. The lack of a commercial market has limited farmer’ interest in improving the management of sorghum, hence average yield has stagnated over the past 15 years despite an increase in area under cultivation. In Tanzania, over 70% of sorghum produced is used for flour and animal feed. Its production is forecasted to increase from the current levels of 1,000,000 metric tons up to 1,843,000 metric tons in the year 2025.
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spelling CGSpace1077192024-03-06T10:16:43Z Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment Demissie, Teferi Dejene Duku, Confidence Groot, Annemarie Kabuka, Godfrey Recha, John W.M. Osumba, Joab J.L. climate change risk food security agriculture In Tanzania, sorghum is grown in almost all the semi-arid areas by subsistence farmers for food, feed, and beer. A total of 6.2 million ha is used for cereal crop production, of which 0.9 million ha (15%) is under sorghum cultivation (FAOSTAT 2017). The major growing regions include Dodoma, Singida, Simiyu, Shinyanga, Tabora, and Mwanza, which together produce 50% of the country's commercial sorghum output. The planting session in these areas commence from mid-November to February. Local varieties are planted by most smallholder farmers due to their affordability. The improved varieties are more costly and also not easily accessible. The lack of a commercial market has limited farmer’ interest in improving the management of sorghum, hence average yield has stagnated over the past 15 years despite an increase in area under cultivation. In Tanzania, over 70% of sorghum produced is used for flour and animal feed. Its production is forecasted to increase from the current levels of 1,000,000 metric tons up to 1,843,000 metric tons in the year 2025. 2020-03-12 2020-03-12T13:27:06Z 2020-03-12T13:27:06Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107719 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security Demissie T, Duku C, Groot A, Kabuka G, Recha J, Osumba J. 2020. Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment. Climate Resilient Agribusiness for Tomorrow (CRAFT).
spellingShingle climate change
risk
food security
agriculture
Demissie, Teferi Dejene
Duku, Confidence
Groot, Annemarie
Kabuka, Godfrey
Recha, John W.M.
Osumba, Joab J.L.
Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title_full Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title_fullStr Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title_full_unstemmed Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title_short Sorghum Tanzania: Climate risk assessment
title_sort sorghum tanzania climate risk assessment
topic climate change
risk
food security
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107719
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AT rechajohnwm sorghumtanzaniaclimateriskassessment
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