From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi

Climate change is not projected to materially alter Malawi’s climate profile. Instead, it is likely to exacerbate existing climate vulnerabilities by increasing the frequency and intensity of cyclones, floods, and droughts. This is largely due to increased uncertainty around future precipitation lev...

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Autores principales: Detelinova, Iva, Thomas, Timothy S., Hammond, Wole, Arndt, Channing, Mukashov, Askar
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132778
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author Detelinova, Iva
Thomas, Timothy S.
Hammond, Wole
Arndt, Channing
Mukashov, Askar
author_browse Arndt, Channing
Detelinova, Iva
Hammond, Wole
Mukashov, Askar
Thomas, Timothy S.
author_facet Detelinova, Iva
Thomas, Timothy S.
Hammond, Wole
Arndt, Channing
Mukashov, Askar
author_sort Detelinova, Iva
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate change is not projected to materially alter Malawi’s climate profile. Instead, it is likely to exacerbate existing climate vulnerabilities by increasing the frequency and intensity of cyclones, floods, and droughts. This is largely due to increased uncertainty around future precipitation levels. These adverse effects have already started to materialize and are expected to increase substantially over the next decades, particularly if efforts to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by high emitting countries are insufficient. Climate change is also projected to increase average annual temperatures across the country. Climate change is expected to significantly affect Malawi’s economy, mainly because of its dependence on climate-sensitive economic sectors and its low capacity to take adaptation measures due to preexisting macroeconomic vulnerabilities. Malawi’s sensitivity to climate shocks is underpinned by significant environmental degradation, in particular deforestation, watershed degradation, and poor soil management. The two main impact channels are likely to be agriculture and road infrastructure. In agriculture, the increased uncertainty around future precipitation levels in Malawi will likely result in higher variability in crop yields. Climate change is projected to exacerbate preexisting environmental degradation challenges, including soil erosion. These effects are particularly problematic due to Malawi’s high poverty rate, lack of economic diversification (the agriculture sector represents one-third of the economy and employs over 70 percent of the workforce), and significant dependence on rainfed production (about 80 percent of the population). Climate change is likely to significantly impact Malawi’s road infrastructure, mainly due to increased risk of flooding, which would have broader economic and social knock-on impacts.
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spelling CGSpace1327782025-12-08T10:11:39Z From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi Detelinova, Iva Thomas, Timothy S. Hammond, Wole Arndt, Channing Mukashov, Askar climate change extreme weather events environmental degradation agriculture infrastructure poverty economic aspects Climate change is not projected to materially alter Malawi’s climate profile. Instead, it is likely to exacerbate existing climate vulnerabilities by increasing the frequency and intensity of cyclones, floods, and droughts. This is largely due to increased uncertainty around future precipitation levels. These adverse effects have already started to materialize and are expected to increase substantially over the next decades, particularly if efforts to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by high emitting countries are insufficient. Climate change is also projected to increase average annual temperatures across the country. Climate change is expected to significantly affect Malawi’s economy, mainly because of its dependence on climate-sensitive economic sectors and its low capacity to take adaptation measures due to preexisting macroeconomic vulnerabilities. Malawi’s sensitivity to climate shocks is underpinned by significant environmental degradation, in particular deforestation, watershed degradation, and poor soil management. The two main impact channels are likely to be agriculture and road infrastructure. In agriculture, the increased uncertainty around future precipitation levels in Malawi will likely result in higher variability in crop yields. Climate change is projected to exacerbate preexisting environmental degradation challenges, including soil erosion. These effects are particularly problematic due to Malawi’s high poverty rate, lack of economic diversification (the agriculture sector represents one-third of the economy and employs over 70 percent of the workforce), and significant dependence on rainfed production (about 80 percent of the population). Climate change is likely to significantly impact Malawi’s road infrastructure, mainly due to increased risk of flooding, which would have broader economic and social knock-on impacts. 2023-11-03 2023-11-06T20:48:20Z 2023-11-06T20:48:20Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132778 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute African Climate Foundation Detelinova, Iva; Thomas, Timothy S.; Hammond, Wole; Arndt, Channing; and Mukashov, Askar. 2023. From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute; Cape Town: The African Climate Foundation.
spellingShingle climate change
extreme weather events
environmental degradation
agriculture
infrastructure
poverty
economic aspects
Detelinova, Iva
Thomas, Timothy S.
Hammond, Wole
Arndt, Channing
Mukashov, Askar
From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title_full From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title_fullStr From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title_short From climate risk to resilience: Unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in Malawi
title_sort from climate risk to resilience unpacking the economic impacts of climate change in malawi
topic climate change
extreme weather events
environmental degradation
agriculture
infrastructure
poverty
economic aspects
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132778
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