Abstract

Climate change is one of the multiple challenges facing all categories of farmers globally. However, African farmers are the most sensitive in respect of climate variability and change. Climate change impacted negatively on crop production and the livelihoods of the local farmers. In black township South Africa, agricultural activities are highly dominated by small-scale farmers, whose farming system is highly vulnerable to changes in climate. This paper presents the analysis of how small-scale farmers employed adaptation strategies in response to climate change and determinants of small-scale households’ choices of coping and adaptation approach to climate variability and change in Vhembe District, South Africa. Multi nominal logit model was used on a surveyed of 224 local farmers. Farmers’ socio-economic attributes, was used in response to climate changes and further, households have adaptation strategies both on-farm and off-farm approach. Such approaches were; drought-tolerant seeds, shorter cycle crops, diversification of crops, changing planting dates, small-scale irrigation, migrating to urban areas and involvement in petty business. The results of the findings reveals that the significant drivers affecting choice of adaptation approach include climate information, gender, farm size, education level, farmer experience, decreasing rainfall and increases in temperature as farmers’ determinant choices of adaptation to climate change. While, on the other hand, off-farm resources, headed households and age had no significant impact on the choice of coping and adaptation approach to climate change. Therefore, policy makers in the local municipality should play a significant role by enhancing adaptation strategies appropriate for particular climatic shock on the study area.

Highlights

  • Climate change is one of the major challenges facing all categories of farmers globally

  • The prime objectives of this study are to investigate adaptation strategies employed by small-scale farmers to combat the negative impacts of climate change and determine drivers that influence small-scale farmers’ decisions to adopt adaptation strategies in Vhembe District, South Africa

  • This study focuses on the impacts of climate change on small-scale farming over the period of 1980–2015, and it impacts on small-scale farmers

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is one of the major challenges facing all categories of farmers globally. Agriculture production is vulnerable to climate variability and change in Africa. Scarcity of water for farming remains a major dilemma for food production and sustainable development (Kahinda and Taigbenu 2011). These have affected small-scale farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa, whose agricultural production relied on rain-fed for their livelihoods (Anderson et al 2010; Alemayehu and Bewket 2017). Food insecurity is mainly caused by changes in rainfall and increase temperature, which brings about prolonged dry spells periods of climate stress on farming systems (Chazovachii 2012; Domenech 2015)

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