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Too fast or too slow: The speed and persistence of adoption of conservation agriculture in southern Africa.

Authors :
Ngoma, Hambulo
Marenya, Paswel
Tufa, Adane
Alene, Arega
Matin, Md Abdul
Thierfelder, Christian
Chikoye, David
Source :
Technological Forecasting & Social Change; Nov2024, Vol. 208, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Conservation agriculture (CA) represents a paradigm shift towards more sustainable and climate-smart intensification of smallholder farming systems in southern Africa. This can only be achieved with reasonably fast, widespread, and sustained adoption of CA. However, many farmers are slow to adopt CA and when they do, they often do not continue using it and eventually dis-adopt. We combine duration models and quantile regression models to study how long farmers take to adopt conservation agriculture once they are trained; and to assess the distributional effects of the drivers of the persistence of adoption once a farmer adopts. Both models account for self-selection which makes adoption endogenous. We find that, on average, farmers take four years to adopt once trained and that there is a congruence between factors that reduce the duration to adoption and those that increase the persistence of adoption. Access to CA extension and credit, labor availability, education and hosting demonstrations increase the speed of adoption by 13–28 %. The duration from the first training, access to extension services, and farming experience increase the persistence of adoption, especially in the initial years. The findings point to the need for implementing multi-year CA promotional programs with medium-term time horizons that should prioritize enhanced training through community-embedded demonstrations and learning sites, and digital extension for extended reach. • We study how long farmers take to adopt CA once trained among true adopters. • And for how long they persist in adoption once they adopt. • We use duration and quantile regression models with selection. • Demonstrations, extension, and training speed up and lengthen CA adoption. • Findings call for investments in long-term, farmer led demonstrations and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00401625
Volume :
208
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Technological Forecasting & Social Change
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179633875
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2024.123689