Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh

Climate-smart agriculture stands as a promising solution to elevate cropping intensity and enhance food security in climate-vulnerable communities. Despite the evident potential, there is an existing gap in understanding the effects of climate change adaptation measures, with limited research explic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kundu, Nanda Dulal, Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan, Sarker, Mou Rani, Sultana, Monira, Uddin, Md. Taj, Bhandari, Humnath, Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168950
_version_ 1855531903273140224
author Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Sarker, Mou Rani
Sultana, Monira
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf
author_browse Bhandari, Humnath
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf
Sarker, Mou Rani
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Sultana, Monira
Uddin, Md. Taj
author_facet Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Sarker, Mou Rani
Sultana, Monira
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf
author_sort Kundu, Nanda Dulal
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate-smart agriculture stands as a promising solution to elevate cropping intensity and enhance food security in climate-vulnerable communities. Despite the evident potential, there is an existing gap in understanding the effects of climate change adaptation measures, with limited research explicitly focusing on adopting sorjan cultivation. This study seeks to address this gap by delving into the effectiveness and determinants of sorjan farming in the coastal regions of Bangladesh. Data was collected in three south-central districts, namely Patuakhali, Jhalakathi, and Pirojpur in 2022. A total of 222 farmers participated in the study, with 120 practicing plain land cultivation, while the remaining 102 were engaged in sorjan farming. Results show that the cropping intensity of farm households increased from 100–200% to 300–500% in sorjan farming. Farmers earned the highest net return by following the crop combinations of ‘Bottle gourd-Potato-Sweet gourd-Indian spinach’, ‘Banana-Okra-Snake gourd-Bottle gourd’, and ‘Jujube-Stem amaranth-Indian spinach’ under the sorjan method in Patuakhali, Jhalakathi, and Pirojpur districts, respectively. On average, farmers realized an additional net benefit of Tk. 55 for every Tk. 100 invested upon transitioning from plain land farming (benefit cost ratio, BCR = 1.25) to sorjan cultivation (BCR = 1.80). The results of the logit model found that household size, farming experience, and extension contact positively influenced the adoption of the sorjan method, while farmers' age and farm size had a negative influence. Further analysis of challenges in both types of farming revealed the advantages of sorjan over plain land cultivation, categorizing them into four distinct areas: environmental, management, input-related, and market issues. Government policies should prioritize holistic support systems and foster collaborative knowledge-sharing among stakeholders to enhance the adoption and diffusion of sorjan farming in coastal communities.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace168950
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1689502025-12-08T09:54:28Z Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh Kundu, Nanda Dulal Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan Sarker, Mou Rani Sultana, Monira Uddin, Md. Taj Bhandari, Humnath Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf food systems climate change profitability farming systems Climate-smart agriculture stands as a promising solution to elevate cropping intensity and enhance food security in climate-vulnerable communities. Despite the evident potential, there is an existing gap in understanding the effects of climate change adaptation measures, with limited research explicitly focusing on adopting sorjan cultivation. This study seeks to address this gap by delving into the effectiveness and determinants of sorjan farming in the coastal regions of Bangladesh. Data was collected in three south-central districts, namely Patuakhali, Jhalakathi, and Pirojpur in 2022. A total of 222 farmers participated in the study, with 120 practicing plain land cultivation, while the remaining 102 were engaged in sorjan farming. Results show that the cropping intensity of farm households increased from 100–200% to 300–500% in sorjan farming. Farmers earned the highest net return by following the crop combinations of ‘Bottle gourd-Potato-Sweet gourd-Indian spinach’, ‘Banana-Okra-Snake gourd-Bottle gourd’, and ‘Jujube-Stem amaranth-Indian spinach’ under the sorjan method in Patuakhali, Jhalakathi, and Pirojpur districts, respectively. On average, farmers realized an additional net benefit of Tk. 55 for every Tk. 100 invested upon transitioning from plain land farming (benefit cost ratio, BCR = 1.25) to sorjan cultivation (BCR = 1.80). The results of the logit model found that household size, farming experience, and extension contact positively influenced the adoption of the sorjan method, while farmers' age and farm size had a negative influence. Further analysis of challenges in both types of farming revealed the advantages of sorjan over plain land cultivation, categorizing them into four distinct areas: environmental, management, input-related, and market issues. Government policies should prioritize holistic support systems and foster collaborative knowledge-sharing among stakeholders to enhance the adoption and diffusion of sorjan farming in coastal communities. 2024-12-12 2025-01-14T09:07:37Z 2025-01-14T09:07:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168950 en Limited Access Springer Kundu, N.D., Sujan, M.H.K., Sarker, M.R. et al. Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh. Environment, Development and Sustainability (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-024-05780-2
spellingShingle food systems
climate change
profitability
farming systems
Kundu, Nanda Dulal
Sujan, Md. Hayder Khan
Sarker, Mou Rani
Sultana, Monira
Uddin, Md. Taj
Bhandari, Humnath
Sarkar, Md Abdur Rouf
Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title_full Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title_fullStr Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title_short Climate-smart practice: level of effectiveness and determinants of Sorjan farming adoption in coastal Bangladesh
title_sort climate smart practice level of effectiveness and determinants of sorjan farming adoption in coastal bangladesh
topic food systems
climate change
profitability
farming systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168950
work_keys_str_mv AT kundunandadulal climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT sujanmdhayderkhan climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT sarkermourani climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT sultanamonira climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT uddinmdtaj climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT bhandarihumnath climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh
AT sarkarmdabdurrouf climatesmartpracticelevelofeffectivenessanddeterminantsofsorjanfarmingadoptionincoastalbangladesh