Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial

Too often, smallholder farmers suffer severe financial consequences from extreme weather events, pests, and disease; and climate change will increase the frequency at which natural hazards occur. This poses a threat to livelihoods not only ex post, by reducing agricultural output and inducing farmer...

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Main Authors: Cecchi, Francesco, Chegeh, Joseph, Aredo, Samson Dejene, Kivuva, Benjamin, Kramer, Berber, Waithaka, Lilian, Waweru, Carol
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142039
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author Cecchi, Francesco
Chegeh, Joseph
Aredo, Samson Dejene
Kivuva, Benjamin
Kramer, Berber
Waithaka, Lilian
Waweru, Carol
author_browse Aredo, Samson Dejene
Cecchi, Francesco
Chegeh, Joseph
Kivuva, Benjamin
Kramer, Berber
Waithaka, Lilian
Waweru, Carol
author_facet Cecchi, Francesco
Chegeh, Joseph
Aredo, Samson Dejene
Kivuva, Benjamin
Kramer, Berber
Waithaka, Lilian
Waweru, Carol
author_sort Cecchi, Francesco
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Too often, smallholder farmers suffer severe financial consequences from extreme weather events, pests, and disease; and climate change will increase the frequency at which natural hazards occur. This poses a threat to livelihoods not only ex post, by reducing agricultural output and inducing farmers to sell their assets, keep children out of school or borrow at high rates; but also ex ante, by discouraging farmers from investing in high-return practices and technologies (Elbers et al., 2007). Innovative solutions are needed to help marginalized farmers prepare for these natural hazards. One solution, building upon decades of agricultural research for development, can be found in the breeding of crop varieties that are more tolerant to weather shocks, pests and disease. The resulting improvements in seed technology offer promising pathways to improve farmers’ adaptive capacity, crowd in investments in agriculture, and thereby enhance agricultural productivity (Emerick et al., 2016). At the same time, stress tolerance is not a bullet-proof solution against all hazards. Farming is risky by nature, and improved stress-tolerant varieties will not shield farmers from more severe hazards, or from risks for which stress tolerance was not an explicit breeding objective. Drought-tolerant varieties are, for instance, not necessarily disease tolerant as well. Improving resilience in the face of climate change will require a more complete solution, in which farmers invest in stress-tolerant varieties to reduce their exposure to moderate, manageable risks, whilst accessing other types of solutions, including financial services, to protect their livelihoods from more severe and catastrophic production risks. This project describes the findings from a research program in Kenya that aims to design, implement, and evaluate more complete risk management solutions; in particular, a solution that promotes stress-tolerant crops and varieties using an innovative picture-based crop insurance (PBI) product. The first describes this intervention and the study designed to measure its impacts, followed by an overview of key findings at midline. This will include insights on the scalability of picture-based claims settlement, opportunities for more gender-responsive program design, and demand for the insurance product. We conclude by describing key challenges faced whilst implementing these solutions and providing an outlook for the future.
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spelling CGSpace1420392025-12-08T10:06:44Z Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial Cecchi, Francesco Chegeh, Joseph Aredo, Samson Dejene Kivuva, Benjamin Kramer, Berber Waithaka, Lilian Waweru, Carol insurance risk management gender women's empowerment seeds technology agricultural insurance empowerment smallholders crop insurance imagery information and communication technologies risk climate-smart agriculture climate change women Too often, smallholder farmers suffer severe financial consequences from extreme weather events, pests, and disease; and climate change will increase the frequency at which natural hazards occur. This poses a threat to livelihoods not only ex post, by reducing agricultural output and inducing farmers to sell their assets, keep children out of school or borrow at high rates; but also ex ante, by discouraging farmers from investing in high-return practices and technologies (Elbers et al., 2007). Innovative solutions are needed to help marginalized farmers prepare for these natural hazards. One solution, building upon decades of agricultural research for development, can be found in the breeding of crop varieties that are more tolerant to weather shocks, pests and disease. The resulting improvements in seed technology offer promising pathways to improve farmers’ adaptive capacity, crowd in investments in agriculture, and thereby enhance agricultural productivity (Emerick et al., 2016). At the same time, stress tolerance is not a bullet-proof solution against all hazards. Farming is risky by nature, and improved stress-tolerant varieties will not shield farmers from more severe hazards, or from risks for which stress tolerance was not an explicit breeding objective. Drought-tolerant varieties are, for instance, not necessarily disease tolerant as well. Improving resilience in the face of climate change will require a more complete solution, in which farmers invest in stress-tolerant varieties to reduce their exposure to moderate, manageable risks, whilst accessing other types of solutions, including financial services, to protect their livelihoods from more severe and catastrophic production risks. This project describes the findings from a research program in Kenya that aims to design, implement, and evaluate more complete risk management solutions; in particular, a solution that promotes stress-tolerant crops and varieties using an innovative picture-based crop insurance (PBI) product. The first describes this intervention and the study designed to measure its impacts, followed by an overview of key findings at midline. This will include insights on the scalability of picture-based claims settlement, opportunities for more gender-responsive program design, and demand for the insurance product. We conclude by describing key challenges faced whilst implementing these solutions and providing an outlook for the future. 2021-12-29 2024-05-22T12:09:51Z 2024-05-22T12:09:51Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142039 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134491 https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133543 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.deveng.2019.100042 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117469 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117471 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Cecchi, Francesco; Chegeh, Joseph; Aredo, Samson Dejene; Kivuva, Benjamin; Kramer, Berber; Waithaka, Lilian; and Waweru, Carol. 2021. Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial. Project December 2021. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134938.
spellingShingle insurance
risk management
gender
women's empowerment
seeds
technology
agricultural insurance
empowerment
smallholders
crop insurance
imagery
information and communication technologies
risk
climate-smart agriculture
climate change
women
Cecchi, Francesco
Chegeh, Joseph
Aredo, Samson Dejene
Kivuva, Benjamin
Kramer, Berber
Waithaka, Lilian
Waweru, Carol
Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title_full Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title_fullStr Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title_full_unstemmed Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title_short Climate-smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress-tolerant seeds: Midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
title_sort climate smart crop insurance to promote adoption of stress tolerant seeds midterm findings from a cluster randomized trial
topic insurance
risk management
gender
women's empowerment
seeds
technology
agricultural insurance
empowerment
smallholders
crop insurance
imagery
information and communication technologies
risk
climate-smart agriculture
climate change
women
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142039
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