Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia

Climate extremes, including droughts, floods, and cyclones, are becoming increasingly frequent, severe, and geographically extensive in Southern Africa, with devastating effects on populations heavily reliant on rain-fed agriculture and broader economies. Farmers urgently need guidance and support t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila, Omondi, John O., Masikati, Patricia, Ngoma, Hambulo, Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: EIA 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172602
_version_ 1855520608999178240
author Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila
Omondi, John O.
Masikati, Patricia
Ngoma, Hambulo
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
author_browse Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila
Masikati, Patricia
Ngoma, Hambulo
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Omondi, John O.
author_facet Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila
Omondi, John O.
Masikati, Patricia
Ngoma, Hambulo
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
author_sort Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Climate extremes, including droughts, floods, and cyclones, are becoming increasingly frequent, severe, and geographically extensive in Southern Africa, with devastating effects on populations heavily reliant on rain-fed agriculture and broader economies. Farmers urgently need guidance and support to build resilience against climate-related disasters. However, the national extension systems in the region lack adequate funding and the capacity to respond promptly and effectively during emergencies. This report analyzes a digital advisory campaign aimed at disseminating awareness and advisory messages to farmers during an El Niño event across Malawi and Zambia, leveraging Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology accessible via basic, non-smart mobile phones. The campaign was rolled out in December 2023, prior to the start of the 2023/24 season. Our report builds on farmer feedback, particularly on how useful they found the campaign, their livelihood outcomes in the aftermath of the El Niño, and other notable trends in the data. The campaign reached over 1 million farmers in the two countries, with more than 90% of respondents finding the messages useful for awareness and preparedness. Both in Malawi and Zambia, radio emerged as the most popular channel for receiving extension messages. Moreover, results also confirmed that meteorological forecasts played a critical role in influencing farmers’ choices of crop and planting dates. For instance, dry spells of more than 21 days led to maize yield losses of 70-90%. Results further indicate that conservation agriculture and the adoption of drought-tolerant crops were the most popular mitigation measures employed by farmers. The findings suggest that Governments need access to appropriate information about the circumstances of their population to make informed decisions about how to efficiently extend support. Digital advisories provide an opportunity to gather real-time data on farm conditions and can be used to deploy support. Additionally, post-event analysis provides valuable evidence that can be used to enhance the design of future response interventions and reduce donor dependence.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace172602
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher EIA
publisherStr EIA
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1726022025-08-15T11:20:52Z Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila Omondi, John O. Masikati, Patricia Ngoma, Hambulo Nyagumbo, Isaiah el nino digital technology conservation agriculture drought tolerance state intervention Climate extremes, including droughts, floods, and cyclones, are becoming increasingly frequent, severe, and geographically extensive in Southern Africa, with devastating effects on populations heavily reliant on rain-fed agriculture and broader economies. Farmers urgently need guidance and support to build resilience against climate-related disasters. However, the national extension systems in the region lack adequate funding and the capacity to respond promptly and effectively during emergencies. This report analyzes a digital advisory campaign aimed at disseminating awareness and advisory messages to farmers during an El Niño event across Malawi and Zambia, leveraging Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology accessible via basic, non-smart mobile phones. The campaign was rolled out in December 2023, prior to the start of the 2023/24 season. Our report builds on farmer feedback, particularly on how useful they found the campaign, their livelihood outcomes in the aftermath of the El Niño, and other notable trends in the data. The campaign reached over 1 million farmers in the two countries, with more than 90% of respondents finding the messages useful for awareness and preparedness. Both in Malawi and Zambia, radio emerged as the most popular channel for receiving extension messages. Moreover, results also confirmed that meteorological forecasts played a critical role in influencing farmers’ choices of crop and planting dates. For instance, dry spells of more than 21 days led to maize yield losses of 70-90%. Results further indicate that conservation agriculture and the adoption of drought-tolerant crops were the most popular mitigation measures employed by farmers. The findings suggest that Governments need access to appropriate information about the circumstances of their population to make informed decisions about how to efficiently extend support. Digital advisories provide an opportunity to gather real-time data on farm conditions and can be used to deploy support. Additionally, post-event analysis provides valuable evidence that can be used to enhance the design of future response interventions and reduce donor dependence. 2024-12 2025-01-31T00:55:02Z 2025-01-31T00:55:02Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172602 en Open Access application/pdf EIA Chiduwa, M.S., Omondi, J.O., Masikati, P., Ngoma, H., & Nyagumbo, I. (2024). Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia. EIA. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/35464
spellingShingle el nino
digital technology
conservation agriculture
drought tolerance
state intervention
Chiduwa, Mazvita Sheila
Omondi, John O.
Masikati, Patricia
Ngoma, Hambulo
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title_full Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title_fullStr Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title_short Empowering farmers with digital El Niño advisories: Insights from Malawi and Zambia
title_sort empowering farmers with digital el nino advisories insights from malawi and zambia
topic el nino
digital technology
conservation agriculture
drought tolerance
state intervention
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172602
work_keys_str_mv AT chiduwamazvitasheila empoweringfarmerswithdigitalelninoadvisoriesinsightsfrommalawiandzambia
AT omondijohno empoweringfarmerswithdigitalelninoadvisoriesinsightsfrommalawiandzambia
AT masikatipatricia empoweringfarmerswithdigitalelninoadvisoriesinsightsfrommalawiandzambia
AT ngomahambulo empoweringfarmerswithdigitalelninoadvisoriesinsightsfrommalawiandzambia
AT nyagumboisaiah empoweringfarmerswithdigitalelninoadvisoriesinsightsfrommalawiandzambia