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On-farm technologies in social context: Improving local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms in Ethiopia

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On-farm technologies in social context: Improving local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms in Ethiopia

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A presentation on how to improve local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms for climate-smart agriculture in Ethiopia. It was delivered at the inception workshop for the CGIAR Initiative for Livestock and Climate by Birgit Habermann

A presentation on how to improve local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms for climate-smart agriculture in Ethiopia. It was delivered at the inception workshop for the CGIAR Initiative for Livestock and Climate by Birgit Habermann

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On-farm technologies in social context: Improving local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms in Ethiopia

  1. 1. Livestock and Climate Initiative Work package 1 Inception Workshop, Debre Birhan, 4 October 2022 On-farm technologies in social context: Improving local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms in North Shewa Zone, Ethiopia Birgit Habermann, ILRI
  2. 2. www.cgiar.org On-farm technologies in social context: Improving local adaptive capacities and inclusive scaling mechanisms • Pioneering approach • How can farmers, experts and scientists co-produce livestock technologies for adaptation and mitigation • Producer-led scaling • Social inclusion, gender sensitivity • What are the tradeoffs between socio-economic and biophysical outcomes
  3. 3. www.cgiar.org Theory of change: 4 countries Oc1: 80k livestock producing households implement climate smart technologies appropriate to their production systems Op1: Validated technology packages tailored to specific agro- ecologies Livestock producers, NARS, producer org.s development partners, private sector IOc1: Data sets for adaptation tracking and MRV in WP5 IOc3: Analyses of socially differentiated adoption capacities and impacts Op4: Methodological innovation and tools for socially scaling; gender and HH Op3: Methodological innovation for multi-dimensional tradeoff and synergy analysis WP5 Governments capacitated for adaptation tracking and MRV Op2: Methodological innovations for technological co-production and producer led scaling IOc2: Tradeoff analyses for learning about socially inclusive scaling of LER practices Livestock producers, producer org.s, NARS, development partners, private sector WP2 CIS Advisories Research partners, producer org.s Research partners, producer org.s WP5 Policy advocacy for social equity targets
  4. 4. Build common ground [scoping study] Co-develop solutions [participatory adaptation analysis] Co-deliver solutions [MEL] •Overview on available CS technologies •Identify key actors/stakeholders •Local inception workshop to develop local partnership •Household survey > sample of Pioneers •Scoping interviews > verification of technologies and final list of Pioneers •Development and testing of a tool for citizen science data collection •Citizen data collection on-farm, involving farmers, social and bio-physical scientists, local partners if applicable •Social science data collection: SSIs, group meetings, Farmer field days,… •Validation and scaling readiness [scaling expert] •Validation workshop with local stakeholders and pioneers COMPONENT 1: Co-production
  5. 5. Site identification, livestock production systems,…. Finding CS technologies (link with existing work at the sites) Meeting stakeholders, inception workshop Household survey to identify statistically positive deviant pioneers Scoping interviews to verify final group of pioneers Citizen Science data collection: tool development, testing and data collection in team of farmers, social and biophysical researchers for 12 months Verify technologies for social implications and overall scaling readiness with validation workshop and scaling expert
  6. 6. • Temperature-Humidity Index from monthly averages from met stations • Climate change parameter: perceived impact Stress-level high/low •Dairy: Daily milk yield, age at first calving, calving interval, mortality (reasons?), species/breed •Fattening: mortality (reasons?), origin of animal, species/breed, animal condition (body scores, weight development, weight when selling, if known…), price when buying and selling, income vs investment… Production performance •Livelihood benefits: use the method of Dismas et al •More than cash income, should capture different aspects •HH ability to cover expenses: school bills, food, financial obligations, investment in farm, spending for buying livestock feed, buying new livestock, infrastructure of farms, keep savings,… Livelihoods Indicators for assessing positive deviance
  7. 7. Providing information Reaching out Capacity building •Share research findings of citizen science data collection •Farmers reports with manuals for interpretation •Tailor made training for pioneers/groups •Farmer led participatory field days •Farmer/expert co-led field days •Feedback workshops •Group development for further scaling •Development of pioneer-based knowledge networks •Building capacities of knowledge networks •Dissemination information materials COMPONENT 2: Scaling
  8. 8. • Farmer-led scaling based on PD groups • Group based F2F training • Communication & outreach • Exchange visits to other sites PCSL Pioneers & their groups • Identification of pioneers • Which technologies are they already working on? • What makes the pioneers different from others: research the practices more in detail to understand the difference: • Biophysical research e.g. on feed quality, feed preservation,… • Social research: Gender/ labour, profitability, different drivers of adaptation… • Farmer-led scaling based on PD groups New pioneers, new groups
  9. 9. www.cgiar.org Citizen Science Focus 2023 • Observation of weather phenomena and climatic variability • Productivity: Monthly data collection • HG, Body scores, if small ruminants weighing to observe changes in weight and body condition • Collecting feed samples • SSIs: short informal interviews, 2-3 times per year
  10. 10. www.cgiar.org Sample size per Woreda HH Survey: 500 Scoping: 50-80 Pioneers: 30-50 Knowledge Networks with pioneers, groups, experts, researchers…. Knowledge Networks with pioneers, groups, experts, researchers….
  11. 11. www.cgiar.org Study site • Mojana Wadera • Tarmber • Alemtena • Feresemegalebiya • Menz Gera • Ashen • Tsehay sina • Atsedas • Basona Werana • Gudo beret • Abamote • Debele ILRI ILRI, ICARDA ILRI, ICARDA, CIAT
  12. 12. Linkages to other CG work Centres working on related topics: • ILRI • ICARDA • CIAT Ongoing projects/Initiatives we are linking with: • MFS-SI: Sustainable Intensification of Mixed Farming Systems • SAPLING: challenges facing Ethiopia’s dairy, poultry and small ruminants’ sectors. Sustainable Animal Productivity for Livelihoods, Nutrition, and Gender Inclusion. • Africa Rising: sustainable intensification of tree-crop-livestock mixed systems
  13. 13. About CGIAR CGIAR is a global research partnership for a food- secure future. CGIAR science is dedicated to transforming food, land and water systems in a climate crisis. Its research is carried out by 13 CGIAR Centers/Alliances in close collaboration with hundreds of partners, including national and regional research institutes, civil society organizations, academia, development organizations and the private sector. www.cgiar.org We would like to thank all Funders who support this research through their contributions to the CGIAR Trust Fund. Thank you!

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