Analysis of the Current and Potential Future Climate Hazards and their Impacts on Livelihoods and Adaptation Strategies in Arid and Semiarid Lands

Authors

  • Boniface N. Wambua Department of Geography & Environmental Studies, University of Nairobi, P.O. Box 30197 – 00100 GPO. Nairobi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24203/ajafs.v7i4.5835

Keywords:

Climate Change, Climate Hazards, Adaptation Strategies

Abstract

The study was carried out in four selected counties within the Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (ASALS) of Kenya namely Garrisa, West Pokot, Kilifi and Tana River which were under Kenya-Adaptation to Climate Change in Arid Lands (KACCAL) program. The study focused on the current and potential future climate hazards and their impacts on livelihoods and adaptation strategies within the framework of Kenya – adaptation to climate change in arid lands. The ASALS covers 80% of Kenya’s land mass and support about 70 percent of the national livestock population and 90% of wildlife resources. Despite the great potential for development in the ASALS, the areas have continued experiencing great climate hazards leading to severe impacts on household livelihoods. The study methodology involved identification and assessing the major climatic hazards experienced for many years and implementation of adaptation strategies by the local communities. This involved a review of operating/ existing assessment of Climate Risks in Agriculture and Rural Development, Field visits, data collection and stakeholder consultation through a series of intensive questionnaire interviews with farmers, project Planners and managers and county officials in the four counties.

The results showed that the four counties under study have been affected by droughts, floods, gusty winds and landslides hazards associated with climate change which have affected the livelihoods of the communities living in the ASALS. The impacts have been felt in food insecurity, scarcity of water resources, loss of livestock resources, persisted crop failure, increased malnutrition cases leading to infant morbidity and mortality among others. The intervention strategies to manage the climate change impacts  applied by stakeholders among other well-wishers are; distribution of food relief, provision of shelter, provision of tents, building gabions, moving families at high risk to saver grounds, construction of water dams and pans. At household level, intervention strategies used are diversification of livelihoods, growing of fodder crops to supplement the natural pasture, charcoal burning, growing of drought resistant crops among others. Subsequently, the study recommends that more awareness should be created among local communities so that they diversify their livelihoods to cope with changing climate. The stakeholder working in ASALs, County governments and National government should invest more on intervention strategies to management climate change impacts

Communities living in ASALs and other stakeholders should be trained on how to use tools and methodologies developed in order to monitor impacts of climate change in their respective counties and implement the appropriate intervention strategies to ensure households recover from impacts associated to of climate change. In other words, capacity building at community, county and national government should be a top priority.

References

• AEA Group.( 2008). Final Report: Kenya: Climate Screening and Information Exchange. Report to Department for International Development, Issue Number 2, September 2008.

• Agnew, M. & Goodess, C. (2015). Developing a Conceptual Framework {2ndDRAFT}, Climatic Research Unit, University of East Anglia, UK retrieved 11thNovember 2015.

• Bimal Raj Regmi et al (2010) Participatory Tools and Techniques for Assessing

• Climate Change Impacts and Exploring Adaptation Options A Community Based Tool Kit for Practitioners.UKaid

• David Kahan (2008) Farm management extension guide, managing risk in farming Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome 2008.

• Fraser, E. D. G., A. J. Dougill, K. Hubacek, C. H. Quinn, J. Sendzimir, and M. Termansen. (2011).Assessing Vulnerability to Climate Change In dry Land Livelihood Systems: Conceptual Challenges and Interdisciplinary Solutions, Ecology and Society 16(3): 3.

• GoK (2010). National Climate Change Response Strategy (NCCRS), Nairobi.

• GOK. 2012. National Climate Change Action Plan 2013 -2017, Nairobi.

• Hinkel, J. 2011. Indicators of vulnerability and adaptive capacity: Towards a clarification of the science-policy interface. Global Environmental Change, 21: 191–208.

• IPCC. (2007). Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change M.L. Parry, O.F. Canziani, J.P. Palutik of, P.J. van der Linden and C.E. Hanson, Eds. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp 976.ISO31000:2009. 2009. Risk Management: Principles and Guidelines

• IDB (2014) Climate Change Data and Risk Assessment Methodologies for the Caribbean, Environmental Safeguards Unit TECHNICAL NOTE No. IDB-TN-633

• Singleton, R.A. Jr., and B.C. Strants. (2005). Approaches to Social Research, 4th ed., Oxford, Oxford University Press

• UNFCCC Secretariat (2004) Compendium on methods and tools to evaluate impacts of, vulnerability and adaptation to climate change. Stratus Consulting Inc.

Downloads

Published

2019-08-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Analysis of the Current and Potential Future Climate Hazards and their Impacts on Livelihoods and Adaptation Strategies in Arid and Semiarid Lands. (2019). Asian Journal of Agriculture and Food Sciences, 7(4). https://doi.org/10.24203/ajafs.v7i4.5835

Similar Articles

11-20 of 43

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.