Coping strategies and vulnerability to climate change of households in Mali. CCAFS Working Paper No. 35

Abstract

Variable and low rainfall patterns combined with increasing population pressure have led to natural resources degradation in the Mopti region of Mali. This has forced both agricultural and pastoral communities to transform their production systems and social relations. To assess the adaptive capacities of these agro-pastoral communities to climate change, a participatory survey was conducted in the region between February and May 2009. 皇冠体育app survey covered in total 175 households, covering 60 households per agro-ecological zone (i.e. the zones S茅no and Gourma), with 15 households per village. In the Delta zone, 55 households were available for the interview. A multiple linear regression analysis was conducted to assess the relationship between household coping strategies and selected factors. 皇冠体育app results showed that strategies adapted by agro-pastoral households to cope with climate change vary according to vulnerability factors such as the insufficiency of pastures for livestock, animals鈥� diseases and death, crop failure caused by erratic rainfall, human sickness, lack of water supply for the livestock, conflicts related to resource use, and several others. 皇冠体育app major coping strategies identified were the reduction in the number of animals, storage of crop residues and other gramineous species for livestock, and grain for the population as well as seeking external help. Some major factors were identified to influence strategies of households to cope with climate change. 皇冠体育app multiple linear regression analysis showed significant relationship between these influencing factors and coping strategies.

Citation

Ng’ang’a, S.K.; Diarra, L.; Notenbaert, A.; Herrero, M. Coping strategies and vulnerability to climate change of households in Mali. CCAFS Working Paper No. 35. CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), Copenhagen, Denmark (2012) 66 pp.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2012