Rationale and aims
This paper presents a review of recent literature on the implications of climate change for agricultural commercialisation, focusing chiefly on sub-Saharan Africa, and incorporating evidence, where relevant, from around the world. Climate change is one of the crosscutting themes of the Department for International Development (DFID)-funded Agricultural Policy Research in Africa (APRA) consortium.1 APRA is intended to produce new data and insights into agricultural commercialisation processes, and their impacts and outcomes with regard to rural poverty, empowerment of women and girls, and food and nutrition security. In addition to outlining our rationale and aims, this introduction sets out (a) the approach we have taken to classifying climate impacts upon agricultural commercialisation, and (b) the structure. Time-constrained readers wishing quickly to get a sense of the paper’s principal insights and recommendations are directed to the summary on page 6.
Given the highly climate-sensitive character of agricultural production, climate change has obvious and important ramifications for agricultural commercialisation, which in turn have a bearing on poverty, gender empowerment, and food and nutrition security. The nature and extent of climate change implications for agricultural commercialisation will depend on the choices that are made and the resulting commercialisation pathways.
It is therefore important that there are opportunities to build considerations of climate change into the design of the APRA research in the early stages. With this objective in mind, this paper aims not only to give a broad indication of the current state of knowledge on climate change and agricultural commercialisation, but also to indicate how and where this is relevant to the APRA research priorities, and to identify key questions to explore in its data collection activities. As such, we outline the salience of key issues for each of the three work streams that, broadly, comprise the APRA research effort. Additionally, we offer a preliminary exploration of the overlaps and intersections between the different crosscutting research themes.