Abstract

The production of charcoal is an important socio-economic activity in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Charcoal production is one of the leading drivers of rural land-use changes in SSA, although the intensity of impacts on the multi-functionality of landscapes varies considerably. Within a given landscape, charcoal production is closely interconnected to agriculture production both as major livelihoods, while both critically depend on the same ecosystem services. The interactions between charcoal and agricultural production systems can lead to positive synergies of impacts, but will more often than not result in trade-offs and even vicious cycles. Such sustainability outcomes vary from one site to another due to the heterogeneity of contexts, including agricultural production systems that affect the adoption of technologies and practices. Trade-offs or cases of vicious cycles occur when one-off resource exploitation of natural trees for charcoal production for short-term economic gains permanently impairs ecosystem functions. Given the fact that charcoal, as an important energy source for the growing urban populations and an essential livelihood for the rural populations, cannot be readily substituted in SSA, there must be policies to support charcoal production. Policies should encourage sustainable technologies and practices, either by establishing plantations or by encouraging regeneration, whichever is more suitable for the local environment. To guide context-specific interventions, this paper presents a new perspective - the charcoal-agriculture nexus - aimed at facilitating the understanding of the socio-economic and ecological interactions of charcoal and agriculture production. The nexus especially highlights two dimensions of the socio-ecological contexts: charcoal value chains and tenure systems. Combinations of the two are assumed to underlie varied socio-economic and ecological sustainability outcomes by conditioning incentive mechanisms to affect the adoption of technologies and practices in charcoal and agriculture productions. Contrasting sustainability outcomes from East Africa are presented and discussed through the lens of the charcoal-agriculture nexus. The paper then concludes by emphasizing the importance of taking into account the two-dimensional socio-ecological contexts into effective policy interventions to turn charcoal-agriculture interactions into synergies.

Highlights

  • The production of charcoal is an important socio-economic activity in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) (Mwampamba et al, 2013; Schure et al, 2014)

  • The distribution patterns of the charcoal value chain are site-specific, while their implications to affect the adoption of technologies/practices in charcoal production are ambiguous depending on their combination with the other socioecological contextual mechanism

  • We assume that tenure systems evolving along with agricultural intensification are as important as the value chain in influencing the adoption of technologies and practices in charcoal production, as indicated in the center part and orange area of Figure 1

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The production of charcoal is an important socio-economic activity in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) (Mwampamba et al, 2013; Schure et al, 2014). To assess the global impacts of woodfuel demand-supply in the tropical regions, Bailis et al (2015) developed a spatially explicit model that accounted for the impacts of deforestation caused by agriculture and other factors. Their results, which indicated large geographic variations in the degree of woodfuel supply-demand balances, identified East Africa as one of the critical depletion “hotspots” where most demand was unsustainable. This paper poses an overarching research question— “what are the main causes of heterogeneous, contrasting sustainability outcomes?” In answering to the question, this paper attempts to present a new nexus perspective to understand the contextual mechanisms underlying varied socio-economic and ecological sustainability outcomes of the charcoal-agriculture productions within African landscapes.

CONCEPTUAL APPROACH
Sustainability Outcomes
Context and Scale
Interpretations of Case Studies
Charcoal as a part of agricultural intensification
Charcoal as a part of livelihood diversification
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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