From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services

- In many countries in Southern and Eastern Africa, input subsidy programmes are common, often focussing on inorganic fertiliser. These programmes often do not achieve their food security objectives, partly because soil health is in decline as a result of years of application of inorganic fertili...

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Autores principales: Campbell, Bruce M., Nyirongo, Jacob, Botha, Blessings, Duchoslav, Jan, Munthali, Moses W., Nyondo, Christone, Sunga, Ishmael, Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137563
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author Campbell, Bruce M.
Nyirongo, Jacob
Botha, Blessings
Duchoslav, Jan
Munthali, Moses W.
Nyondo, Christone
Sunga, Ishmael
Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
author_browse Botha, Blessings
Campbell, Bruce M.
Duchoslav, Jan
Munthali, Moses W.
Nyirongo, Jacob
Nyondo, Christone
Sunga, Ishmael
Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
author_facet Campbell, Bruce M.
Nyirongo, Jacob
Botha, Blessings
Duchoslav, Jan
Munthali, Moses W.
Nyondo, Christone
Sunga, Ishmael
Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
author_sort Campbell, Bruce M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description - In many countries in Southern and Eastern Africa, input subsidy programmes are common, often focussing on inorganic fertiliser. These programmes often do not achieve their food security objectives, partly because soil health is in decline as a result of years of application of inorganic fertilisers in the absence of other soil ameliorative measures. - Solutions to soil health decline are well known, and include various combinations of fallowing, crop diversification, intercropping and crop rotations (especially legume rotations), soil organic matter additions, liming and applications of the appropriate inorganic fertilisers. But many of these come with significant socio-economic and technical challenges to farmers. - A way forward is through compensating farmers for soil health services, which will generate a multitude of private and public benefits. This would be a form of Payment for Environmental Services (PES), as supported in the global initiative CompensACTION,1 led by the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). - Nine recommendations for implementing a soil health payment scheme are presented, some of which focus on the broader enabling environment. - Development partners can support the implementation of Payments for Soil Heath Services schemes by: assisting countries in establishing pilot schemes for lessons learning; supporting longer term monitoring of soil health changes; supporting government efforts to repurpose subsidy policies; and facilitating public-private partnerships to leverage in private sector investment in activities that will enhance soil health.
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spelling CGSpace1375632025-11-06T06:24:50Z From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services Campbell, Bruce M. Nyirongo, Jacob Botha, Blessings Duchoslav, Jan Munthali, Moses W. Nyondo, Christone Sunga, Ishmael Wollenberg, Eva Karoline climate change mitigation smallholders-smallholder farmers climate change agriculture climate change adaptation fertilizers-fertilisers payments for ecosystem services soil quality-soil health farm inputs-agricultural inputs - In many countries in Southern and Eastern Africa, input subsidy programmes are common, often focussing on inorganic fertiliser. These programmes often do not achieve their food security objectives, partly because soil health is in decline as a result of years of application of inorganic fertilisers in the absence of other soil ameliorative measures. - Solutions to soil health decline are well known, and include various combinations of fallowing, crop diversification, intercropping and crop rotations (especially legume rotations), soil organic matter additions, liming and applications of the appropriate inorganic fertilisers. But many of these come with significant socio-economic and technical challenges to farmers. - A way forward is through compensating farmers for soil health services, which will generate a multitude of private and public benefits. This would be a form of Payment for Environmental Services (PES), as supported in the global initiative CompensACTION,1 led by the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). - Nine recommendations for implementing a soil health payment scheme are presented, some of which focus on the broader enabling environment. - Development partners can support the implementation of Payments for Soil Heath Services schemes by: assisting countries in establishing pilot schemes for lessons learning; supporting longer term monitoring of soil health changes; supporting government efforts to repurpose subsidy policies; and facilitating public-private partnerships to leverage in private sector investment in activities that will enhance soil health. 2023-11 2024-01-11T10:53:54Z 2024-01-11T10:53:54Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137563 en Open Access application/pdf Campbell, B.; Nyirongo, J.; Botha, B.; Duchoslav, J.; Munthali, M.W.; Nyondo, C.; Sunga, I.; Wollenberg, E. (2023) From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services. 12 p.
spellingShingle climate change mitigation
smallholders-smallholder farmers
climate change
agriculture
climate change adaptation
fertilizers-fertilisers
payments for ecosystem services
soil quality-soil health
farm inputs-agricultural inputs
Campbell, Bruce M.
Nyirongo, Jacob
Botha, Blessings
Duchoslav, Jan
Munthali, Moses W.
Nyondo, Christone
Sunga, Ishmael
Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title_full From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title_fullStr From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title_full_unstemmed From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title_short From input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
title_sort from input subsidies to compensating farmers for soil health services
topic climate change mitigation
smallholders-smallholder farmers
climate change
agriculture
climate change adaptation
fertilizers-fertilisers
payments for ecosystem services
soil quality-soil health
farm inputs-agricultural inputs
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137563
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