Ofoegbu, Chidiebere
- SLU Swedish Species Information Centre, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Review article2022Peer reviewedOpen access
Ofoegbu, Chidiebere; New, Mark
The use of climate services (CS) for the provisioning of climate information for informed decision-making on adaptation action has gained momentum. However, a comprehensive review of the literature to evaluate the lessons and experiences of CS implementation in the African agriculture sector is still lacking. Here, we present a systematic review (mapping) of 50 pieces of literature documenting lessons and experiences of CS adoption in the agriculture sector of 20 African countries. The qualitative analysis of the reviewed literature revealed: (1) CS implementation overwhelmingly relied on a participatory process through workshops and participatory scenario planning meetings to connect users with actors along the CS value chain of forecast production, translation, integration, and application. Additionally, innovations such as mobile phones and internet service are increasingly being integrated with CS to strengthen the relationship between CS providers and users. They are, however, mostly at the trial stage and tend to have a varying impact depending on available facilities and infrastructure in the community. (2) Although there is a growing recognition of the need for the integration of indigenous and scientific knowledge systems in the production of climate information, such integration is currently not happening. Rather, indigenous knowledge holders are engaged in a participatory process for insight on modalities of making scientific climate information locally relevant and acceptable. Given the aforementioned findings, we recommend further research on modalities for facilitating indigenous knowledge mainstreaming in climate information production, and investigation of options for using innovations (e.g., mobile) to enhance the interactions between CS users and CS providers. Such research will play a great role in scaling up the adoption of CS in the African agricultural sector.
Africa; knowledge systems; climate change; agriculture; adaptation
Agriculture
2022, Volume: 12, number: 2, article number: 160Publisher: MDPI
SLUsystematic
SDG2 Zero hunger
SDG13 Climate action
SDG16 Peace, justice and strong institutions
Agricultural Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture12020160
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/116401