Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review

Ethiopia’s small ruminant sector is a cornerstone of rural livelihoods, contributing significantly to food security, income, and climate resilience. However, the marketing system remains inefficient, constrained by poor infrastructure, price volatility, and limited access to formal markets. This rev...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dussie, Tsegaye, Chalchisa, Tamiru, Bekele, Yadeta, Mekuriaw, Shigdaf, Van Dijk, Suzanne, Makonnen, Brook
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174620
_version_ 1855528749931429888
author Dussie, Tsegaye
Chalchisa, Tamiru
Bekele, Yadeta
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
Makonnen, Brook
author_browse Bekele, Yadeta
Chalchisa, Tamiru
Dussie, Tsegaye
Makonnen, Brook
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
author_facet Dussie, Tsegaye
Chalchisa, Tamiru
Bekele, Yadeta
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
Makonnen, Brook
author_sort Dussie, Tsegaye
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Ethiopia’s small ruminant sector is a cornerstone of rural livelihoods, contributing significantly to food security, income, and climate resilience. However, the marketing system remains inefficient, constrained by poor infrastructure, price volatility, and limited access to formal markets. This review examines the interplay between small ruminant off-take rates and three critical dimensions: food and nutrition security, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and adaptive capacity in extensive production systems. The review process adopted the PRISMA model and entirely relied on secondary data. A total of 40 articles and study reports were used in the study. Findings reveal that Ethiopia’s four-tier marketing structure, comprising primary, secondary, terminal, and informal cross-border channels, is dominated by informal transactions (85%), with producers receiving only 35–45% of the final consumer price due to exploitative intermediaries. Low offtake rates (20–30%) reflect risk-averse strategies but limit meat supply and income potential, while high offtake risks deplete breeding stocks and undermine resilience. Small ruminants contribute ~30% of agricultural GHG emissions, yet optimized offtake and improved feeding practices could reduce emission intensities. Emerging innovations, such as mobile-based market information systems and cooperative marketing, demonstrate promise in enhancing equity and efficiency. Investing in market infrastructure, encouraging climate-smart behaviour, and putting policies in place that strike a balance between sustainability and productivity are some of the main recommendations of this study.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace174620
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1746202025-05-16T01:06:37Z Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review Dussie, Tsegaye Chalchisa, Tamiru Bekele, Yadeta Mekuriaw, Shigdaf Van Dijk, Suzanne Makonnen, Brook small ruminants marketing food security greenhouse gas emissions Ethiopia’s small ruminant sector is a cornerstone of rural livelihoods, contributing significantly to food security, income, and climate resilience. However, the marketing system remains inefficient, constrained by poor infrastructure, price volatility, and limited access to formal markets. This review examines the interplay between small ruminant off-take rates and three critical dimensions: food and nutrition security, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and adaptive capacity in extensive production systems. The review process adopted the PRISMA model and entirely relied on secondary data. A total of 40 articles and study reports were used in the study. Findings reveal that Ethiopia’s four-tier marketing structure, comprising primary, secondary, terminal, and informal cross-border channels, is dominated by informal transactions (85%), with producers receiving only 35–45% of the final consumer price due to exploitative intermediaries. Low offtake rates (20–30%) reflect risk-averse strategies but limit meat supply and income potential, while high offtake risks deplete breeding stocks and undermine resilience. Small ruminants contribute ~30% of agricultural GHG emissions, yet optimized offtake and improved feeding practices could reduce emission intensities. Emerging innovations, such as mobile-based market information systems and cooperative marketing, demonstrate promise in enhancing equity and efficiency. Investing in market infrastructure, encouraging climate-smart behaviour, and putting policies in place that strike a balance between sustainability and productivity are some of the main recommendations of this study. 2025-04 2025-05-15T18:29:29Z 2025-05-15T18:29:29Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174620 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Dussie, T., Chalchisa, T., Bekele, Y., Mekuriaw, S., Van Dijk, S. and Makonnen, B. 2025. Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review. Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa’ Project. ACIAR Reports. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle small ruminants
marketing
food security
greenhouse gas emissions
Dussie, Tsegaye
Chalchisa, Tamiru
Bekele, Yadeta
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
Makonnen, Brook
Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_full Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_fullStr Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_short Impacts of Off Take Rate through Small Ruminant Marketing on Food and Nutrition Security, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Adaptive Capacity in Extensive Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_sort impacts of off take rate through small ruminant marketing on food and nutrition security greenhouse gas emissions and adaptive capacity in extensive systems in ethiopia a narrative review
topic small ruminants
marketing
food security
greenhouse gas emissions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174620
work_keys_str_mv AT dussietsegaye impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview
AT chalchisatamiru impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview
AT bekeleyadeta impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview
AT mekuriawshigdaf impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview
AT vandijksuzanne impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview
AT makonnenbrook impactsofofftakeratethroughsmallruminantmarketingonfoodandnutritionsecuritygreenhousegasemissionsandadaptivecapacityinextensivesystemsinethiopiaanarrativereview