Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.

A climate-smart agriculture (CSA) prioritization exercise in Western Kenya was carried out as part of the activities in the CIAT-led research project on ‘Climatesmart soil protection and rehabilitation in Western Kenya’, funded by GIZ. This project aims to encourage sustainable approaches to promote...

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Autores principales: Mwongera, Caroline, Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi, Kinyua, Ivy Wambui, Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82530
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author Mwongera, Caroline
Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi
Kinyua, Ivy Wambui
Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley
author_browse Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley
Kinyua, Ivy Wambui
Mwongera, Caroline
Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi
author_facet Mwongera, Caroline
Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi
Kinyua, Ivy Wambui
Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley
author_sort Mwongera, Caroline
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A climate-smart agriculture (CSA) prioritization exercise in Western Kenya was carried out as part of the activities in the CIAT-led research project on ‘Climatesmart soil protection and rehabilitation in Western Kenya’, funded by GIZ. This project aims to encourage sustainable approaches to promote soil protection and rehabilitation of degraded soil in Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, India and Kenya. It also supports policy development for soil rehabilitation, soil information, and extension systems. A two-day regional workshop with 45 participants was held in Western Kenya; participants were local agricultural experts, representatives of agriculture related local NGOs and farmers from Bungoma, Kakamega and Siaya counties. Six farmers were invited from each of the five farm typologies (that had previously been identified by this project): i) smallscale mixed subsistence; ii) medium-scale mixed with commercial horticulture; iii) medium-scale mixed with commercial dairy; iv) medium-scale mixed with commercial cereal; and v) large-scale commercial farming. Separate focus group discussions were held with farmers and local experts, respectively to explore the differences between stakeholders. The workshop modules included: validation of the typologies in the three counties; CSA indicator selection; development of a short list of agricultural practices appropriate for each farm type; and climatesmartness assessment based on the three CSA pillars (i.e. production, adaptation and mitigation). Practices were prioritized using pairwise ranking and information on the potential benefits of practices by stakeholder was also documented. This study highlights the value of evaluating which practices were preferred in a local context and highlights the climate smartness of these practices based on desired objectives by local experts and farmers. Efforts to increase soil restoration and rehabilitation in Western Kenya should target the prioritized practices in each farm type to achieve high adoption rates and attain CSA goals. In addition, barriers highlighted by the stakeholders should be considered. Assessing practices against the CSA pillars helps to ensure that prioritized practices can also provide win–win or co-benefits to climate change adaptation and mitigation. Implementing this study was a way of testing the CSA prioritization framework developed by CIAT in 2014, which led to the development of a revised CSA prioritization process.
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spelling CGSpace825302025-11-05T18:01:37Z Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya. Mwongera, Caroline Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi Kinyua, Ivy Wambui Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley climate-smart agriculture agricultura climáticamente inteligente indicators indicadores productivity productividad yield rendimiento A climate-smart agriculture (CSA) prioritization exercise in Western Kenya was carried out as part of the activities in the CIAT-led research project on ‘Climatesmart soil protection and rehabilitation in Western Kenya’, funded by GIZ. This project aims to encourage sustainable approaches to promote soil protection and rehabilitation of degraded soil in Benin, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, India and Kenya. It also supports policy development for soil rehabilitation, soil information, and extension systems. A two-day regional workshop with 45 participants was held in Western Kenya; participants were local agricultural experts, representatives of agriculture related local NGOs and farmers from Bungoma, Kakamega and Siaya counties. Six farmers were invited from each of the five farm typologies (that had previously been identified by this project): i) smallscale mixed subsistence; ii) medium-scale mixed with commercial horticulture; iii) medium-scale mixed with commercial dairy; iv) medium-scale mixed with commercial cereal; and v) large-scale commercial farming. Separate focus group discussions were held with farmers and local experts, respectively to explore the differences between stakeholders. The workshop modules included: validation of the typologies in the three counties; CSA indicator selection; development of a short list of agricultural practices appropriate for each farm type; and climatesmartness assessment based on the three CSA pillars (i.e. production, adaptation and mitigation). Practices were prioritized using pairwise ranking and information on the potential benefits of practices by stakeholder was also documented. This study highlights the value of evaluating which practices were preferred in a local context and highlights the climate smartness of these practices based on desired objectives by local experts and farmers. Efforts to increase soil restoration and rehabilitation in Western Kenya should target the prioritized practices in each farm type to achieve high adoption rates and attain CSA goals. In addition, barriers highlighted by the stakeholders should be considered. Assessing practices against the CSA pillars helps to ensure that prioritized practices can also provide win–win or co-benefits to climate change adaptation and mitigation. Implementing this study was a way of testing the CSA prioritization framework developed by CIAT in 2014, which led to the development of a revised CSA prioritization process. 2017-06 2017-06-20T13:16:02Z 2017-06-20T13:16:02Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82530 en Open Access application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture Mwongera C; Mwungu C; Kinyua I; Karanja S. 2017. Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya. Working Paper. CIAT Publication No. 442. International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT). Nairobi, Kenya. 21 p.
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
agricultura climáticamente inteligente
indicators
indicadores
productivity
productividad
yield
rendimiento
Mwongera, Caroline
Mwungu, Chris Miyinzi
Kinyua, Ivy Wambui
Karanja Ng'ang'a, Stanley
Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title_full Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title_fullStr Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title_full_unstemmed Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title_short Prioritizing climate-smart agriculture practices in Western Kenya.
title_sort prioritizing climate smart agriculture practices in western kenya
topic climate-smart agriculture
agricultura climáticamente inteligente
indicators
indicadores
productivity
productividad
yield
rendimiento
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/82530
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