Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco

Farmers in the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region face several interrelated challenges including natural resource depletion, low crop productivity, and food and nutrition insecurity. To address some of these challenges, governments are considering different incentives to increase crop produc...

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Autores principales: El Ansari, Loubna, Chenoune, Roza, Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe, Komarek, Adam M., Gary, Christian, Belhouchette, Hatem
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/134998
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author El Ansari, Loubna
Chenoune, Roza
Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe
Komarek, Adam M.
Gary, Christian
Belhouchette, Hatem
author_browse Belhouchette, Hatem
Chenoune, Roza
El Ansari, Loubna
Gary, Christian
Komarek, Adam M.
Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe
author_facet El Ansari, Loubna
Chenoune, Roza
Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe
Komarek, Adam M.
Gary, Christian
Belhouchette, Hatem
author_sort El Ansari, Loubna
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Farmers in the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region face several interrelated challenges including natural resource depletion, low crop productivity, and food and nutrition insecurity. To address some of these challenges, governments are considering different incentives to increase crop production. However, incentives often entail trade-offs and may have diverging effects on economic, social, and environmental sustainability. This study assessed the ex-ante effects of incentives targeted towards increasing crop production on the production and consumption decisions of farm households on the Saïss plain of northern Morocco. The assessment was conducted with a dynamic, intertemporal farm household model that simulates farm production and food consumption decisions. The model was calibrated using survey data from 85 farm households for 2014. Four scenarios were codesigned with local stakeholders and then simulated over a continuous 15-year period to capture rainfall variability: (1) increased availability of annual groundwater for irrigated cropping from 31 m3 ha−1 to 215 m3 ha−1, (2) a 15% increase in grain prices for cereals and legumes, (3) introduced drought tolerant crop varieties, and (4) a fourth scenario that combines all factors in the above three scenarios. Our results showed that regardless of the scenario, the area of cereals and legumes cultivated only slightly changed compared to the Baseline scenario. However, according to the scenarios tested, the total production of cereals increased by 10% to 21% and of legumes increased by 2% to 9%. This production increase is the direct consequence of increased crop yields due to an intensification of crop production methods. The incentives increased the consumption of cereals and legumes by up to 43%. This increase was mainly due to a shift from grain to vegetable production that increases cash income, resulting in more food purchases from the market while consumption from own production dropped by up to 53%. The average increase in crop income was 14% in scenarios 1–3 and 28% in scenario 4. However, increased income had ramifications for nature resource stocks, with irrigation water use from groundwater increasing by 593% in the Water scenario and 320% in the combined scenario, relative to the Baseline scenario. In the Water scenario, incomes increased by 15% and nitrogen leached increased by 36%, highlighting the trade-off between economic and environmental sustainability. These results show the challenges in obtaining acceptable compromises between the three sustainability pillars as the scenarios increased income but also led to increased groundwater extraction and nitrate leaching.
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spelling CGSpace1349982025-11-12T06:10:45Z Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco El Ansari, Loubna Chenoune, Roza Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe Komarek, Adam M. Gary, Christian Belhouchette, Hatem natural resources management climate change adaptation food security intensification agricultural production sustainability agricultural prices irrigation Farmers in the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region face several interrelated challenges including natural resource depletion, low crop productivity, and food and nutrition insecurity. To address some of these challenges, governments are considering different incentives to increase crop production. However, incentives often entail trade-offs and may have diverging effects on economic, social, and environmental sustainability. This study assessed the ex-ante effects of incentives targeted towards increasing crop production on the production and consumption decisions of farm households on the Saïss plain of northern Morocco. The assessment was conducted with a dynamic, intertemporal farm household model that simulates farm production and food consumption decisions. The model was calibrated using survey data from 85 farm households for 2014. Four scenarios were codesigned with local stakeholders and then simulated over a continuous 15-year period to capture rainfall variability: (1) increased availability of annual groundwater for irrigated cropping from 31 m3 ha−1 to 215 m3 ha−1, (2) a 15% increase in grain prices for cereals and legumes, (3) introduced drought tolerant crop varieties, and (4) a fourth scenario that combines all factors in the above three scenarios. Our results showed that regardless of the scenario, the area of cereals and legumes cultivated only slightly changed compared to the Baseline scenario. However, according to the scenarios tested, the total production of cereals increased by 10% to 21% and of legumes increased by 2% to 9%. This production increase is the direct consequence of increased crop yields due to an intensification of crop production methods. The incentives increased the consumption of cereals and legumes by up to 43%. This increase was mainly due to a shift from grain to vegetable production that increases cash income, resulting in more food purchases from the market while consumption from own production dropped by up to 53%. The average increase in crop income was 14% in scenarios 1–3 and 28% in scenario 4. However, increased income had ramifications for nature resource stocks, with irrigation water use from groundwater increasing by 593% in the Water scenario and 320% in the combined scenario, relative to the Baseline scenario. In the Water scenario, incomes increased by 15% and nitrogen leached increased by 36%, highlighting the trade-off between economic and environmental sustainability. These results show the challenges in obtaining acceptable compromises between the three sustainability pillars as the scenarios increased income but also led to increased groundwater extraction and nitrate leaching. 2023-12 2023-12-04T21:42:02Z 2023-12-04T21:42:02Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/134998 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier El Ansari, Loubna; Chenoune, Roza; Yigezu, Yigezu A.; Komarek, Adam M.; Gary, Christian; and Belhouchette, Hatem. 2023. Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco. Agricultural Systems 212(December 2023): 103769. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2023.103769
spellingShingle natural resources management
climate change adaptation
food security
intensification
agricultural production
sustainability
agricultural prices
irrigation
El Ansari, Loubna
Chenoune, Roza
Yigezu, Yigezu Atnafe
Komarek, Adam M.
Gary, Christian
Belhouchette, Hatem
Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title_full Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title_fullStr Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title_full_unstemmed Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title_short Intensification options in cereal-legume production systems generate trade-offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern Morocco
title_sort intensification options in cereal legume production systems generate trade offs between sustainability pillars for farm households in northern morocco
topic natural resources management
climate change adaptation
food security
intensification
agricultural production
sustainability
agricultural prices
irrigation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/134998
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