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CCARPASA Project

File
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2013
Description/Abstract

This presentation discusses enhancing evidence based climate change adaptation research and policy for agriculture in southern Africa.

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

The Centre for Coordination of Agricultural Research and Development for Southern Africa (CCARDESA). 2013, CCARPASA Project. Gaborone, Botswana.

Innovations and Emerging Trends in Agriculture Insurance: How can we transfer natural risk out of rural livelihoods to empower and protect people?

Date of Publication
Jul 01, 2018
Description/Abstract

Agriculture is a risky business and farmers face a host of market and production risks that make their incomes volatile from year to year. These risks include yield losses due to bad weather, pests and diseases; post-harvest losses during storage and transport; and unexpectedly low market prices. In many cases, farmers are also confronted by the risk of catastrophic losses, for example, when crops or livestock are destroyed by drought, re or new pest outbreaks, or when lives and assets are lost due to extreme weather events like hurricanes and oods. These risks can pose challenging nancial problems even for large commercial farms in developed countries, but the consequences for vast numbers of smallholders around the developing world are much more severe. Major shocks to household incomes, food consumption and assets worsen poverty and lead to episodic humanitarian crises that require large- scale relief interventions.

Author or Institution as Author
Ulrich Hess
Co-authors

Peter Hazell and Saskia Kuhn.

Institution
GIZ
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Ulrich Hess, Peter Hazell, Innovations and Emerging Trends in Agriculture Insurance, 2016, Bonn and Eschborn, Germany.

CCARDESA's Climate Change Adaptation Strategy

File
Date of Publication
Jan 01, 2015
Description/Abstract

CCARDESA's Climate Change Adaptation Strategy: Evidence from CCARPASA Project

Author or Institution as Author
Timothy Simaleng
Co-authors

Timothy Simalenga, Simon Mwale, Baitse Podisi and Berhanu F. Alemaw.

Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Timothy Simalenga, Simon Mwale and Baitse Podisi, The Centre for Coordination of Agricultural Research and Development for Southern Africa (CCARDESA). Berhanu F. Alemaw of University of Botswana. 2015,  Gaborone, Botswana.

Comparative Assessment of Weather Index Insurance Strategies Review

File
Date of Publication
May 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

This Literature Review is the rst step towards a comparative assessment of Weather Index Insurance (WII) in the agricultural sector in East and Southern Africa. The second step involves visits to four countries (Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and Zambia) covered by the Climate Smart Agriculture Programme (Vuna) funded by DFID, which have weather index insurance programmes. The visits will allow collection of information on the recent performance of those programs and obtain the perceptions of key stakeholders on lessons learned, constraints, sustainability, and potential of those insurance programmes to address issues related to strengthening the resilience of agricultural systems to weather risk. The ndings from both stages will be summarised in an Evidence and Learning Report focussing on the determinants of success or failure of the programmes under implementation.

This paper summarizes the main ndings of the global experience on the implementation of WII specically the lessons learned on the mechanics of the index, pro tability, bundling, impacts, and potential role in climate change adaptation. It also discusses the challenges of current pilot projects in East and Southern Africa, wherever secondary information is available.

Author or Institution as Author
Vuna
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

rce, Carlos. 2016. Comparative Assessment of Selected Agricultural Weather Index Insurance Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

Comparative Assessment of Selected Agricultural Weather Index Insurance Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa Report

Type
File
Date of Publication
Jul 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

This paper presents a review of the commercial sustainability, profitability, challenges, impact, and potential contribution of weather index insurance (WII) products to improving resilience in weather-affected agricultural systems in developing countries. This is important given the continuing demand on governments to manage the considerable weather risk faced by smallholders in Sub-Saharan Africa and other weather-exposed regions in developing economies.

This assessment has been developed in a two-step process. First, a literature review was conducted summarising the global experience in developing weather index insurance programmes. Second, we conducted a field investigation designed to extract a more detailed understanding of whether the results of recently launched WII pilots in Sub-Saharan Africa (in Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) are in line with the global experience.

Author or Institution as Author
Carlos E. Arce
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

Arce, Carlos. 2016. Comparative Assessment of Selected Agricultural Weather Index Insurance Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

Agricultural Weather Index Insurance in Sub-Saharan Africa Brief

File
Date of Publication
Jul 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

Based on the Vuna report “Comparative Assessment of Selected Agricultural Weather Index Insurance Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa,” by Carlos E. Arce (August 2016).

Author or Institution as Author
Carlos E. Arce
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

“Comparative Assessment of Selected Agricultural Weather Index Insurance Strategies in Sub-Saharan Africa,” by Carlos E. Arce (August 2016). Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

Scaling Up and Scalability: Concepts, Frameworks and Assessment Report

File
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

Effective scaling up is a key measure of success for an innovation or intervention. A new approach is typically tested in a pilot project that has limited reach. With monitoring and evaluation (M&E), the lessons learned from the pilot can be used to scale up the model to create larger socioeconomic and developmental impacts. The decision to scale up, however, is often made with incomplete information. Given the high cost of scaling up, it is important for governments and development partners to carefully decide which innovations are ready for further investment. A good understanding of the scaling-up process and a framework for analysing scalability is critical for informed decision-making.

Author or Institution as Author
Ponniah Anandajayasekeram
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

Anandajayasekeram, Ponniah. 2016. Scaling Up and Scalability: Concepts, Frameworks and Assessment. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: Anandajayasekeram, Ponniah. 2016. Scaling Up and Scalability: Concepts, Frameworks and Assessment. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

Assessing Opportunities for the Scaling UP of Agricultural Projects Brief

File
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

This information brief highlights key findings in the Vuna report “Scaling Up and Scalability: Concepts, Frameworks and Assessment,” by Pooniah Anandajayasekeram

Author or Institution as Author
Ponniah Anandajayasekeram
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

“Scaling Up and Scalability: Concepts, Frameworks and Assessment,” by Pooniah Anandajayasekeram (October 2016). Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

Reaching More Farmers with High Quality Seed for Drought Tolerant Crops Report

File
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

Crop yields in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are typically less than half of yields in the developed world. With growing populations, and with climate change already beginning to put downward pressure on crop yields, intervention is urgently needed to enable farmers in SSA to produce more food. A key first step is to ensure that farmers have greater, and more reliable, access to high-quality seed of the modern varieties of climate smart crops that will best equip them to both feed themselves and produce food for barter or sale.

In many cases, breeding work for new varieties has been done. Farmers, however, are unaware of the new varieties, or seed of these varieties is not reaching them at meaningful levels. As a result, potential farmer yield and overall production levels for the target crops are not realised. The opportunity cost associated with this is significant and, without intervention, will grow as the effects of climate change increase.

Author or Institution as Author
Agri Experience
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

Agri Experience. 2016. Reaching More Farmers with High Quality Seed for Drought Tolerant Crops. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com”

Agricultural Drought and Climate Smart Agriculture Report

File
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2016
Description/Abstract

- Drought is the single greatest climate risk faced by most farmers in Eastern and Southern Africa. In discussions of climate risk, it is crucial to distinguish between meteorological drought (lower-than-average annual or seasonal rainfall) and agricultural drought (insufficient water at critical stages of crop growth).

Global climate change models do a poor job predicting either type of drought (or flooding), and there appears to be little relationship between drought and rising levels of greenhouse gases. Drought and flooding are more closely correlated with El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events, which appear to predate global warming.

Author or Institution as Author
Vuna
Institution
Vuna
Language
Category
Citation

Walker, Sue. 2016. Agricultural Drought and Climate Smart Agriculture. Vuna Research Report. Pretoria: Vuna. Online: http://www.vuna-africa.com

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