Barron, Jennie
- Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2022Peer reviewedOpen access
Piemontese, Luigi; Kamugisha, Rick Nelson; Barron, Jennie; Tukahirwa, Joy Margaret Biteete; Harari, Nicole; Jaramillo, Fernando
In Uganda, upgrading smallholder agriculture is a necessary step to achieve the interlinked sustainable development goals of hunger eradication, poverty reduction and land degradation neutrality. However, targeting the right restoration practices and estimate their cost-benefit at the national scale is difficult given the highly contextual nature of restoration practices and the diversity of small-scale interventions to be adopted. By analysing the context-specific outcomes of 82 successful case studies on different sustainable land and water management (SLWM) in Uganda, we estimated that out-scaling of existing successful practices to 75% of agricultural land would require a one-time investment of US$ 4.4 billion from smallholders. Our results show that, besides the many social and environmental benefit commonly associated to SLWM, a wide outscale of SLWM could generate US$ 4.7 billion every year, once the practices are fully operational. Our context-specific estimates highlight the profitability of investing in smallholder farming to achieve the sustainable development goals in Uganda, with geographical differences coming from specific social-ecological conditions. This study can guide sustainable intensification development by targeting the most suitable SLWM practices and plan for adequate financial support from government, investors and international development aids to smallholder farming.
Uganda; agriculture; sustainable intensification; archetype analysis; smallholder farming; sustainability science
Environmental Research Letters
2022, volume: 17, number: 4, article number: 045010
Publisher: IOP Publishing Ltd
SDG1 No poverty
SDG2 Zero hunger
SDG15 Life on land
Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/116640