Sensitivity of Cropping Patterns in Africa to Transient Climate Change
The detailed analysis of current cropping areas in Africa presented here reveals significant climate sensitivities of cropland density and distribution across a variety of agro-ecosystems. Based on empirical climate-cropland relationships, cropland...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/07/7998467/sensitivity-cropping-patterns-africa-transient-climate-change http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7480 |
Summary: | The detailed analysis of current
cropping areas in Africa presented here reveals significant
climate sensitivities of cropland density and distribution
across a variety of agro-ecosystems. Based on empirical
climate-cropland relationships, cropland density responds
positively to increases in precipitation in semi-arid and
arid zones of the sub-tropics and warmer temperatures in
higher elevations. As a result, marginal increases in
seasonal precipitation lead to denser cropping areas in arid
and semi-arid regions. Warmer temperatures, on the other
hand, tend to decrease the probability of cropping in most
parts of Africa (the opposite is true for increases in
rainfall and decreases in temperatures relative to current
conditions). Despite discrepancies and uncertainties in
climate model output, the analysis suggests that cropland
area in Africa is likely to decrease significantly in
response to transient changes in climate. The continent is
expected to have lost on average 4.1 percent of its cropland
by 2039, and 18.4 percent is likely to have disappeared by
the end of the century. In some regions of Africa the losses
in cropland area are likely to occur at a much faster rate,
with northern and eastern Africa losing up to 15 percent of
their current cropland area within the next 30 years or so.
Gains in cropland area in western and southern Africa due to
projected increases in precipitation during the earlier
portions of the century will be offset by losses later on.
In conjunction with existing challenges in the agricultural
sector in Africa, these findings demand sound policies to
manage existing agricultural lands and the productivity of
cropping systems. |
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