Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala

Guatemala’s agricultural sector faces persistent challenges linked to climate variability, soil degradation, and the high vulnerability of smallholder production systems, particularly in hillside areas and the Dry Corridor. In this context, climate-smart agriculture has emerged as a key approach to...

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Main Authors: Borrayo, Andrea, Lizarazo, Miguel, Martinez, Deissy, Garcia, Jorge Octavio, Diaz, Anabell, Jimenez, Benancio, van Loon, Jelle, Carranza, Carlos, Hidalgo, Lisandro, García, Marcelo
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180627
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author Borrayo, Andrea
Lizarazo, Miguel
Martinez, Deissy
Garcia, Jorge Octavio
Diaz, Anabell
Jimenez, Benancio
van Loon, Jelle
Carranza, Carlos
Hidalgo, Lisandro
García, Marcelo
author_browse Borrayo, Andrea
Carranza, Carlos
Diaz, Anabell
Garcia, Jorge Octavio
García, Marcelo
Hidalgo, Lisandro
Jimenez, Benancio
Lizarazo, Miguel
Martinez, Deissy
van Loon, Jelle
author_facet Borrayo, Andrea
Lizarazo, Miguel
Martinez, Deissy
Garcia, Jorge Octavio
Diaz, Anabell
Jimenez, Benancio
van Loon, Jelle
Carranza, Carlos
Hidalgo, Lisandro
García, Marcelo
author_sort Borrayo, Andrea
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Guatemala’s agricultural sector faces persistent challenges linked to climate variability, soil degradation, and the high vulnerability of smallholder production systems, particularly in hillside areas and the Dry Corridor. In this context, climate-smart agriculture has emerged as a key approach to strengthen resilience, stabilize productivity, and improve food security. However, its sustained adoption depends largely on the presence of territorial mechanisms that connect actors, infrastructure, and information to support informed and context-specific decision-making processes. This document systematizes and reorganizes evidence generated in Guatemala between 2023 and 2025 under the AgriLAC Resiliente initiative and the CGIAR Scaling for Impact (S4I) Science Program, with a focus on strengthening regional and local mechanisms and identifying entry points for scaling climate-smart agriculture. The analysis integrates evidence from innovation networks, territorial infrastructure, Local Technical Agroclimatic Committees (LTACs), agroclimatic bulletins, participatory research processes, and agronomic research platforms. Findings show that scaling is a non-linear and territorially differentiated process, shaped by the interaction of institutional arrangements, local capacities, operational infrastructure, and learning mechanisms. Innovation networks supported inter-institutional coordination and knowledge exchange, while territorial infrastructure enabled a gradual transition from technical validation to adoption under real production conditions. In parallel, LTACs and agroclimatic services strengthened the link between climate information and farm-level decision-making. Evidence from implemented practices, participatory trials with biofortified crops, and research platforms confirms that scaling potential varies according to the type of innovation, its technical complexity, and economic feasibility. Overall, the results highlight the importance of responsible, evidence-based, and context-sensitive scaling approaches that recognize territories as central spaces for climate adaptation and sustainable agricultural development in Guatemala.
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spelling CGSpace1806272026-01-26T11:22:21Z Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala Borrayo, Andrea Lizarazo, Miguel Martinez, Deissy Garcia, Jorge Octavio Diaz, Anabell Jimenez, Benancio van Loon, Jelle Carranza, Carlos Hidalgo, Lisandro García, Marcelo climate-smart agriculture territorial development innovation scaling local climate action Guatemala’s agricultural sector faces persistent challenges linked to climate variability, soil degradation, and the high vulnerability of smallholder production systems, particularly in hillside areas and the Dry Corridor. In this context, climate-smart agriculture has emerged as a key approach to strengthen resilience, stabilize productivity, and improve food security. However, its sustained adoption depends largely on the presence of territorial mechanisms that connect actors, infrastructure, and information to support informed and context-specific decision-making processes. This document systematizes and reorganizes evidence generated in Guatemala between 2023 and 2025 under the AgriLAC Resiliente initiative and the CGIAR Scaling for Impact (S4I) Science Program, with a focus on strengthening regional and local mechanisms and identifying entry points for scaling climate-smart agriculture. The analysis integrates evidence from innovation networks, territorial infrastructure, Local Technical Agroclimatic Committees (LTACs), agroclimatic bulletins, participatory research processes, and agronomic research platforms. Findings show that scaling is a non-linear and territorially differentiated process, shaped by the interaction of institutional arrangements, local capacities, operational infrastructure, and learning mechanisms. Innovation networks supported inter-institutional coordination and knowledge exchange, while territorial infrastructure enabled a gradual transition from technical validation to adoption under real production conditions. In parallel, LTACs and agroclimatic services strengthened the link between climate information and farm-level decision-making. Evidence from implemented practices, participatory trials with biofortified crops, and research platforms confirms that scaling potential varies according to the type of innovation, its technical complexity, and economic feasibility. Overall, the results highlight the importance of responsible, evidence-based, and context-sensitive scaling approaches that recognize territories as central spaces for climate adaptation and sustainable agricultural development in Guatemala. 2025-12-12 2026-01-26T09:46:08Z 2026-01-26T09:46:08Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180627 en Open Access application/pdf Borrayo, A.; Lizarazo, M.; Martinez, D.; Garcia, J.O.; Diaz, A.; Jimenez, B.; van Loon, J.; Carranza, C.; Hidalgo, L.; García, M. (2025) Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala. CGIAR Scaling for Impact Science Program. 18 p.
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
territorial development
innovation scaling
local climate action
Borrayo, Andrea
Lizarazo, Miguel
Martinez, Deissy
Garcia, Jorge Octavio
Diaz, Anabell
Jimenez, Benancio
van Loon, Jelle
Carranza, Carlos
Hidalgo, Lisandro
García, Marcelo
Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title_full Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title_fullStr Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title_full_unstemmed Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title_short Territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate-smart agriculture in Guatemala
title_sort territorial mechanisms and scaling processes for climate smart agriculture in guatemala
topic climate-smart agriculture
territorial development
innovation scaling
local climate action
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180627
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