farming systems analysis—ghana and mali

28
Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali Africa RISING West Africa Review and Planning Meeting, Bamako, Mali, 3-4 February 2014 Jeroen Groot (Wageningen University)

Upload: africa-rising

Post on 21-Dec-2014

69 views

Category:

Technology


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Presented by Jeroen Groot (Wageningen University) at the Africa RISING West Africa Review and Planning Meeting, Bamako, Mali, 3-4 February 2014

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Africa RISING West Africa Review and Planning Meeting, Bamako, Mali, 3-4 February 2014

Jeroen Groot (Wageningen University)

Page 2: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Introduction Entry points for sustainable intensification:• Farm components: crop and animal yield gaps• Farm yield gaps: configurations of components and inputs• Interactions with social-ecological and economic environment:

networks, markets, resources

Integrated farming systems analysis needed:• Context-specific• On-farm testing• Embedded in communities

Page 3: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Introduction Relations with farmer- and community-oriented, on-farm

and on-station research:• Basket of technologies: local research on crops, animals, etc.• Quantification of input-output relations• Engage in an inform stakeholder / community discussions

Page 4: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Methodology

Survey

Rapid characteriz.

Detailed description

Explorationinnovations

Functional typology

Structural typology

Systems(re)design

Extrapolation

Farm diagnoses

Tradeoff analysis

Farm innovations

Potentialimpact

Page 5: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Ghana• Northern, Upper West and Upper East

Mali• Bougouni and Koutiala with ICRISAT

Malawi• Dedza and Ntcheu with MSU

Tanzania• Babati and Kongwa & Kiketo

Where?

Page 6: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Villages in Koutiala and Bougouni districts Three different groupings in total

Farmer types grouped on basis of:• Livestock numbers: tropical livestock units, TLU• (Active) farm family members• Farm area, and fallow area for Bougouni

Mali typology

Page 7: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Mali typology (example Koutiala)

Falconnier 2013

TLU>21

yes

no

Type 1:Large, high TLU

Actives>9

yes

no

Type 2:Large, avg. TLU

Land>5.8Tools

>2TLU>2.2

yes

no

Type 3:Medium sized

Type 4:Small sized farms

Page 8: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

3 regions (North, Upper West, Upper East) 25 intervention communities 80 HHs surveyed per region, grouping per region

Farmer types grouped on the basis of:• Resource endowment (land, livestock, assets)• Production orientation (subsistence, consumption, market)• Source of income (on-farm vs. off-farm)

Ghana typology

Page 9: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Ghana typology

Arable landLivestockHH sizeAssets

Wealthindicators

Type 1

Resourceendowment

Productionorientation

Source ofincome

Type 2

Type 3

Type 4

Type 5

LRE

MRE

HRE

Subsistence

Consumption > market

Consumption = market

Consumption < market

On-farm only

On-farm> off-farm

On-farm= off-farm

On-farm< off-farm

Page 10: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Mali Ghana

Farm area

Livestock (TLU)

Persons/area

Koutiala Boug 1 Boug 2 North Upper West Upper East

Koutiala Boug 1 Boug 2 North Upper West Upper East

Koutiala Boug 1 Boug 2 North Upper West Upper East

Page 11: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Income sources Ghana

Page 12: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Food insecurity Ghana

Page 13: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Example farm in model (Ghana)

Page 14: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali
Page 15: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Exploration of system alternatives

Green = reconfiguration of the original farm componentsOrange = after adding Maize + Soybean and Maize + Cowpea

Page 16: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Entry points at system level

Page 17: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Entry points at system level

Page 18: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Sustainable development

Source: www.thenaturalstep.org

Page 19: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Continue and underpin the evaluation of entry points

Compare findings between countries, incl. Tanzania and Malawi

Strengthen relations with farmer- and community-oriented, on-farm and station research

Plans for continuation of systems analysis with two PhD students

Discussion

Page 20: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation

africa-rising.net

The presentation has a Creative Commons licence. You are free to re-use or distribute this work, provided credit is given to ILRI.

Thank you for your [email protected]

Page 21: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Sustainable development

Source: www.thenaturalstep.org

Page 22: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali
Page 23: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali
Page 24: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 40%

10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%

100%

Series 3Series 2Series 1

Page 25: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Acknowledge partners here:project partners WA

Page 26: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Acknowledge partners here: Project partners ESA

Page 27: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Acknowledge partners here: Project partners Ethiopia

Page 28: Farming systems analysis—Ghana and Mali

Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation

africa-rising.net

The presentation has a Creative Commons licence. You are free to re-use or distribute this work, provided credit is given to ILRI.

Thank You