Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda

Objective: The study aimed to explore the entrepreneurial mindset and the factors influencing smallholder coffee farmers' intentions to adopt or continue adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies with a case study in greater Luwero, Uganda. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 230 smallholder...

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Main Author: Senyange, B.
Format: Tesis
Language:Inglés
Published: Ghent University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178226
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author Senyange, B.
author_browse Senyange, B.
author_facet Senyange, B.
author_sort Senyange, B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Objective: The study aimed to explore the entrepreneurial mindset and the factors influencing smallholder coffee farmers' intentions to adopt or continue adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies with a case study in greater Luwero, Uganda. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 230 smallholder coffee farmers in greater Luwero, Uganda, formed the basis for the study. Data was collected using a questionnaire based on the Business model canvas, Theory of Planned Behavior, Entrepreneurial Orientation theory, and Diffusion of Innovation Theory. The study employed structural equation modelling to predict farmer attitudes and intentions to adopt or continue adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies and cluster analysis to group farmers based on their entrepreneurial mindset. Results: Segmentation analysis identified four groups of coffee farmers; 20.4% enterprising, 40.9% indecisive, 25.2% conservative and 13.5% non-enterprising and they differ significantly based on farmer characteristics and compliance with business model canvas elements. The perceived innovation characteristics significantly predicted coffee farmers' attitudes toward adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies. While subjective norms constitute a potential barrier, attitudes, perceived behavioural control, and entrepreneurial orientation merged to positively and significantly influence coffee farmers' intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture technologies. On average, 80% of coffee farmers intend to adopt labour-intensive climate-smart agriculture technologies, compared to only 49.2% for capital-intensive technologies, of which 87% were enterprising coffee farmers. Conclusion: The study's findings added to the literature regarding adopting agricultural technologies, notably entrepreneurial orientation, a novel variable in assessing farmers' intentions to adopt new technologies. The small percentage of enterprising farmers indicates a low level of entrepreneurism among coffee farmers hence the low intentions to adopt climate-smart agriculture technologies. Future studies should validate these findings and consider the multidimensional perspective of entrepreneurial orientation, use data gathered over time, look at actual adoption rates, and assess the impact of climate-smart agriculture technologies. Examining how farmer entrepreneurial mindset and perceptions influence climate-smart agriculture adoption intention offers a solid platform for more targeted scaling policies and intervention strategies to be designed and implemented in a more sustainable manner.
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spelling CGSpace1782262025-12-08T10:11:39Z Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda Senyange, B. entrepreneurship adoption climate-smart agriculture coffee uganda smallholders Objective: The study aimed to explore the entrepreneurial mindset and the factors influencing smallholder coffee farmers' intentions to adopt or continue adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies with a case study in greater Luwero, Uganda. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 230 smallholder coffee farmers in greater Luwero, Uganda, formed the basis for the study. Data was collected using a questionnaire based on the Business model canvas, Theory of Planned Behavior, Entrepreneurial Orientation theory, and Diffusion of Innovation Theory. The study employed structural equation modelling to predict farmer attitudes and intentions to adopt or continue adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies and cluster analysis to group farmers based on their entrepreneurial mindset. Results: Segmentation analysis identified four groups of coffee farmers; 20.4% enterprising, 40.9% indecisive, 25.2% conservative and 13.5% non-enterprising and they differ significantly based on farmer characteristics and compliance with business model canvas elements. The perceived innovation characteristics significantly predicted coffee farmers' attitudes toward adopting climate-smart agriculture technologies. While subjective norms constitute a potential barrier, attitudes, perceived behavioural control, and entrepreneurial orientation merged to positively and significantly influence coffee farmers' intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture technologies. On average, 80% of coffee farmers intend to adopt labour-intensive climate-smart agriculture technologies, compared to only 49.2% for capital-intensive technologies, of which 87% were enterprising coffee farmers. Conclusion: The study's findings added to the literature regarding adopting agricultural technologies, notably entrepreneurial orientation, a novel variable in assessing farmers' intentions to adopt new technologies. The small percentage of enterprising farmers indicates a low level of entrepreneurism among coffee farmers hence the low intentions to adopt climate-smart agriculture technologies. Future studies should validate these findings and consider the multidimensional perspective of entrepreneurial orientation, use data gathered over time, look at actual adoption rates, and assess the impact of climate-smart agriculture technologies. Examining how farmer entrepreneurial mindset and perceptions influence climate-smart agriculture adoption intention offers a solid platform for more targeted scaling policies and intervention strategies to be designed and implemented in a more sustainable manner. 2022 2025-11-26T11:15:04Z 2025-11-26T11:15:04Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178226 en Open Access application/pdf Ghent University Senyange, B. (2022). Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda. Ghent, Belgium: Ghent University, (78 p.).
spellingShingle entrepreneurship
adoption
climate-smart agriculture
coffee
uganda
smallholders
Senyange, B.
Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title_full Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title_fullStr Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title_short Farmer's entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate-smart agriculture: the case of coffee farmers in greter Luwero, Uganda
title_sort farmer s entrepreneurial mindset and the intention to adopt climate smart agriculture the case of coffee farmers in greter luwero uganda
topic entrepreneurship
adoption
climate-smart agriculture
coffee
uganda
smallholders
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178226
work_keys_str_mv AT senyangeb farmersentrepreneurialmindsetandtheintentiontoadoptclimatesmartagriculturethecaseofcoffeefarmersingreterluwerouganda