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Will African Agriculture Survive Climate Change?
Author(s) -
Pradeep Kurukulasuriya,
Robert Mendelsohn,
Rashid Hassan,
James Benhin,
Temesgen Deressa,
Mbaye Diop,
Helmy Mohamed Eid,
Kwadwo Fosu,
Glwadys Aymone Gbetibouo,
Suman Jain,
Ali Mahamadou,
Renneth Mano,
Jane KabuboMariara,
Samia El-Marsafawy,
Ernest L. Molua,
Samiha Ouda,
Mathieu Ouédraogo,
Isidor Séne,
David Maddison,
S. Niggol Seo,
Ariel Dinar
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
the world bank economic review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.542
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1564-698X
pISSN - 0258-6770
DOI - 10.1093/wber/lhl004
Subject(s) - climate change , agriculture , livestock , environmental science , irrigation , revenue , global warming , effects of global warming , precipitation , agroforestry , agricultural economics , geography , economics , agronomy , ecology , forestry , accounting , archaeology , meteorology , biology
Measurement of the likely magnitude of the economic impact of climate change on African agriculture has been a challenge. Using data from a survey of more than 9,000 farmers across 11 African countries, a cross-sectional approach estimates how farm net revenues are affected by climate change compared with current mean temperature. Revenues fall with warming for dryland crops (temperature elasticity of -1.9) and livestock (-5.4), whereas revenues rise for irrigated crops (elasticity of 0.5), which are located in relatively cool parts of Africa and are buffered by irrigation from the effects of warming. At first, warming has little net aggregate effect as the gains for irrigated crops offset the losses for dryland crops and livestock. Warming, however, will likely reduce dryland farm income immediately. The final effects will also depend on changes in precipitation, because revenues from all farm types increase with precipitation. Because irrigated farms are less sensitive to climate, where water is available, irrigation is a practical adaptation to climate change in Africa.

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