Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin

Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian highlands is constrained mainly by high climate variability. Although use of soil and water conservation technologies is recognized as a key strategy to improve agricultural productivity, adoption of technologies has been very low as farmers consider a variety...

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Autores principales: Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria, Rebelo, Lisa-Maria, Notenbaert, An Maria Omer, Abebe, Yenenesh, Ergano, Kebebe, Leta, Gerba
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34248
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author Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria
Rebelo, Lisa-Maria
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Abebe, Yenenesh
Ergano, Kebebe
Leta, Gerba
author_browse Abebe, Yenenesh
Ergano, Kebebe
Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria
Leta, Gerba
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Rebelo, Lisa-Maria
author_facet Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria
Rebelo, Lisa-Maria
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Abebe, Yenenesh
Ergano, Kebebe
Leta, Gerba
author_sort Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian highlands is constrained mainly by high climate variability. Although use of soil and water conservation technologies is recognized as a key strategy to improve agricultural productivity, adoption of technologies has been very low as farmers consider a variety of factors in their adoption decision. This study assesses the adoption pattern of interrelated rainwater management technologies and investigates factors that influence farm household adoption and scaling-up of rainwater management technologies and draws recommendations for policy. Our results show that rainwater management technologies are interdependent to each other implying that technology adoption decisions need to capture the spillover effect on the adoption of other technologies and have follow a multi-dimensional approach. Moreover, our results suggest that instead of promoting blanket recommendations, it is important to understand the socio-economic, demographic characteristics and biophysical suitability of the rainwater management technologies. Although impact of gender is likely technology-specific and generalization is not possible, our result indicates that male-headed households have a comparative advantage in rainwater management technologies adoption in the Nile Basin and suggests the need to address the constraints of women farmers to give them an opportunity to actively participate in rural economic activities.
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language Inglés
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
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spelling CGSpace342482025-03-11T09:50:20Z Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria Rebelo, Lisa-Maria Notenbaert, An Maria Omer Abebe, Yenenesh Ergano, Kebebe Leta, Gerba water Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian highlands is constrained mainly by high climate variability. Although use of soil and water conservation technologies is recognized as a key strategy to improve agricultural productivity, adoption of technologies has been very low as farmers consider a variety of factors in their adoption decision. This study assesses the adoption pattern of interrelated rainwater management technologies and investigates factors that influence farm household adoption and scaling-up of rainwater management technologies and draws recommendations for policy. Our results show that rainwater management technologies are interdependent to each other implying that technology adoption decisions need to capture the spillover effect on the adoption of other technologies and have follow a multi-dimensional approach. Moreover, our results suggest that instead of promoting blanket recommendations, it is important to understand the socio-economic, demographic characteristics and biophysical suitability of the rainwater management technologies. Although impact of gender is likely technology-specific and generalization is not possible, our result indicates that male-headed households have a comparative advantage in rainwater management technologies adoption in the Nile Basin and suggests the need to address the constraints of women farmers to give them an opportunity to actively participate in rural economic activities. 2013-11-01 2013-12-14T14:52:52Z 2013-12-14T14:52:52Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34248 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33929 Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Gebregziabher, G., Rebelo, L-M., Notenbaert, A., Abebe, Y., Ergano, K. and Leta, G. 2013. Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin. IN: Wolde, M. (ed). 2013, Rainwater management for resilient livelihoods in Ethiopia: Proceedings of the Nile Basin Development Challenge Science Meeting, Addis Ababa, 9–10 July 2013. NBDC Technical Report 5. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle water
Gebregziabher, Gebrehaweria
Rebelo, Lisa-Maria
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Abebe, Yenenesh
Ergano, Kebebe
Leta, Gerba
Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title_full Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title_fullStr Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title_short Assessment of farmers’ rainwater management technology adoption in the Blue Nile basin
title_sort assessment of farmers rainwater management technology adoption in the blue nile basin
topic water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34248
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