Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy

This technical report synthesizes agronomic trial evidence and spatially explicit ex-ante modeling to assess the productivity and economic returns to agricultural lime application in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia. The analysis is motivated by increasing policy interest in soil...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan, Chamberlin, Jordan, Silva, João Vasco
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CIMMYT 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179702
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author Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan
Chamberlin, Jordan
Silva, João Vasco
author_browse Chamberlin, Jordan
Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan
Silva, João Vasco
author_facet Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan
Chamberlin, Jordan
Silva, João Vasco
author_sort Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This technical report synthesizes agronomic trial evidence and spatially explicit ex-ante modeling to assess the productivity and economic returns to agricultural lime application in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia. The analysis is motivated by increasing policy interest in soil health investments as a pathway to improve fertilizer use efficiency, close yield gaps, and enhance the cost-effectiveness of public and private agricultural investments. While soil acidity is widespread across Southern and Eastern Africa, the evidence shows that the economic case for liming is highly heterogeneous and context specific. Across Malawi and Tanzania, agronomic responses to lime are generally modest and spatially constrained, translating into limited short-term profitability under prevailing price conditions. Only small, localized pockets achieve benefit–cost ratios above unity, underscoring the risks of blanket recommendations or nationwide subsidy programs. In contrast, Zambia exhibits substantially stronger yield responses and more favorable economic returns, with a large share of maize-growing areas showing positive net benefits from lime application. However, even in Zambia, profitability remains sensitive to lime prices, transport costs, and spatial variation in soil acidity and yield potential. Taken together, the findings highlight the need for targeted, data-driven soil health strategies that explicitly account for spatial heterogeneity, market conditions, and risk. Lime investments are most defensible when embedded within broader soil fertility and input intensification strategies, rather than promoted as a stand-alone solution.
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spelling CGSpace1797022026-01-13T02:07:26Z Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan Chamberlin, Jordan Silva, João Vasco agricultural lime maize fertilizers yield gap public-private partnerships agricultural policies This technical report synthesizes agronomic trial evidence and spatially explicit ex-ante modeling to assess the productivity and economic returns to agricultural lime application in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia. The analysis is motivated by increasing policy interest in soil health investments as a pathway to improve fertilizer use efficiency, close yield gaps, and enhance the cost-effectiveness of public and private agricultural investments. While soil acidity is widespread across Southern and Eastern Africa, the evidence shows that the economic case for liming is highly heterogeneous and context specific. Across Malawi and Tanzania, agronomic responses to lime are generally modest and spatially constrained, translating into limited short-term profitability under prevailing price conditions. Only small, localized pockets achieve benefit–cost ratios above unity, underscoring the risks of blanket recommendations or nationwide subsidy programs. In contrast, Zambia exhibits substantially stronger yield responses and more favorable economic returns, with a large share of maize-growing areas showing positive net benefits from lime application. However, even in Zambia, profitability remains sensitive to lime prices, transport costs, and spatial variation in soil acidity and yield potential. Taken together, the findings highlight the need for targeted, data-driven soil health strategies that explicitly account for spatial heterogeneity, market conditions, and risk. Lime investments are most defensible when embedded within broader soil fertility and input intensification strategies, rather than promoted as a stand-alone solution. 2025-12-25 2026-01-12T15:57:24Z 2026-01-12T15:57:24Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179702 en Open Access application/pdf CIMMYT CGIAR Gebrekidan, B., Chamberlin, J., & Silva, J. V. (2025). Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy. CIMMYT & CGIAR. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/36655
spellingShingle agricultural lime
maize
fertilizers
yield gap
public-private partnerships
agricultural policies
Gebrekidan, Bisrat Gebrekidan
Chamberlin, Jordan
Silva, João Vasco
Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title_full Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title_fullStr Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title_full_unstemmed Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title_short Targeting agricultural lime investments in maize-based systems of Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia: A brief summary of high-level evidence to inform soil health policy
title_sort targeting agricultural lime investments in maize based systems of malawi tanzania and zambia a brief summary of high level evidence to inform soil health policy
topic agricultural lime
maize
fertilizers
yield gap
public-private partnerships
agricultural policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179702
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