Measuring the economic impact of climate change on major South African field crops: a Ricardian approach

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Measuring the economic impact of climate change on major South African field crops: a Ricardian approach
Abstract
This study employed a Ricardian model to measure the impact of climate change on South Africa's field crops and analysed potential future impacts of further changes in the climate. A regression of farm net revenue on climate, soil and other socio-economic variables was conducted to capture farmer-adapted responses to climate variations. The analysis was based on agricultural data for seven field crops (maize, wheat, sorghum, sugarcane, groundnut, sunflower and soybean), climate and edaphic data across 300 districts in South Africa. Results indicate that production of field crops was sensitive to marginal changes in temperature as compared to changes in precipitation. Temperature rise positively affects net revenue whereas the effect of reduction in rainfall is negative. The study also highlights the importance of season and location in dealing with climate change showing that the spatial distribution of climate change impact and consequently needed adaptations will not be uniform across the different agro-ecological regions of South Africa. Results of simulations of climate change scenarios indicate many impacts that would induce (or require) very distinct shifts in farming practices and patterns in different regions. Those include major shifts in crop calendars and growing seasons, switching between crops to the possibility of complete disappearance of some field crops from some region.
Publication
Global and Planetary Change
Volume
47
Issue
2-4
Pages
143-152
Date
2005-07-01
ISSN
0921-8181
Call Number
openalex: W2098572304
Extra
openalex: W2098572304 mag: 2098572304
Citation
Gbetibouo, G. A., & Hassan, R. M. (2005). Measuring the economic impact of climate change on major South African field crops: a Ricardian approach. Global and Planetary Change, 47(2–4), 143–152. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2004.10.009