Abstract

As global changes continue, the repercussions in Africa remain profound. This is reflected notably in food and water crises across Africa. This work examines the readiness of Africa to climate change adaptation through a newly developed readiness index (ClimAdaptCap Index). In fact, this work shifts the readiness debate from emotional descriptions that currently flood academic scholarship to a more pragmatic evidence-based approach in assessing readiness. Readiness for climate change adaptation is driven by the intensity of climate forcing and adaptive capacity. The historical climate score data or precipitation and temperature for the period 1991–2016 were culled from the World Bank Climate Portal. The historical adaptive capacity score data included proxies such as poverty and literacy rates from 1991 to 2016 were collected from the World Bank and Macrotrends. The climate data were normalized using the normalization function to enhance interpretation, comparison, and fusion into the index. Missing poverty and literacy rate data were estimated by linear interpolation of the poverty and literacy rate data. The ClimAdaptCap Index was developed to compute readiness. This index is the first of its kind and will serve as a flagship for assessing readiness for climate change adaptation as it is highly adaptable to different contexts. This work’s first-ever maps of readiness show that North and Southern Africa are the readiest for climate change adaptation under historical climate and literacy and poverty conditions. West Africa is the least ready while Middle and East Africa are in the middle. Consistent is that readiness has a positive correlation with literacy rates and an inverse one with poverty rates. In addition, with readiness scores of between 0.35 and 0.39 for all the regions with a maximum potential score of 1, this work has shown that the level of readiness in Africa is generally low, and there is a very small variation between the different regions. In addition, climate change adaptation will highly be influenced by both climatic and non-climatic indicators. The developed readiness index adequately simulates readiness to climate change adaptation in Africa and complements previous frameworks of adaptation preparedness.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAcross Africa, there has been observations of an increase in near-surface temperatures by 0.5 ◦ C or more during the last 50 to 100 years [1,2,3]

  • 1991–2016 are observed over Africa, West Africa witnesses higher mean monthly/annual rainfall over the period covered by the data

  • It can be observed that the region with the lowest rainfall (North Africa) records the highest temperatures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Across Africa, there has been observations of an increase in near-surface temperatures by 0.5 ◦ C or more during the last 50 to 100 years [1,2,3]. North Africa has witnessed annual and seasonal observed increasing trends in mean surface temperatures that are significantly beyond the rates and ranges of change due to natural variability. In the warm season (March-August), an increase in near-surface temperatures is observed over. North African, Algeria, and Morocco, not mainly due to natural variability. This region experienced positive trends in terms of annual minimum and maximum temperatures [2]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call