Evidence support the potential for climate-smart agriculture in Tanzania

National governments across Sub-Saharan Africa include climate-smart agriculture (CSA)—context-specific interventions that support resilience, productivity, and climate mitigation—in plans, policies, and strategies to jointly address climate change, agricultural production, and rural livelihood goal...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jones, Kristal, Nowak, Andreea C., Berglund, Erika, Grinnell, Willow, Temu, Emmanuel, Paul, Birthe K., Renwick, Leah L.R., Steward, Peter R., Rosenstock, Todd S., Kimaro, Anthony A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/127099
Description
Summary:National governments across Sub-Saharan Africa include climate-smart agriculture (CSA)—context-specific interventions that support resilience, productivity, and climate mitigation—in plans, policies, and strategies to jointly address climate change, agricultural production, and rural livelihood goals. This paper synthesizes the evidence on field-based CSA management practices generated through ten years of research led by the CGIAR in Tanzania. Results show consistent positive impacts of CSA on productivity, mixed impacts on resilience, short-term negative impacts on emissions intensity, and highly variable impacts on socioeconomic characteristics. Tanzania provides an example of how an agriculturally diverse country can use evidence of impacts, synergies, and tradeoffs to prioritize CSA activities for sustainable development.