Exploring the ecosystem limits to poverty alleviation in African forest-agriculture landscapes

Lead Research Organisation: Nature Conservation Research Centre
Department Name: Head office

Abstract

Agricultural development is a major pathway out of poverty in rural Africa. The cultivation of cash crops for sale alongside subsistence crops helps improve livelihoods and alleviate poverty in rural communities. The productivity of these farming systems relies on services provided by the agro-ecosystem within which they occur. These services include fertile soils, the control of pests and diseases, and crop pollination by wild animals. We know that some agricultural systems can damage these services in the longer-term - soil fertility declines, pest and disease outbreaks become more common, pollination levels are reduced. This means that although rural livelihoods might be improved by agricultural development in the short-term, ecosystem degradation and the associated loss of ecosystem services might threaten these gains in the medium to long-term.

Has agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa exceeded the capacity of ecosystems to support it? If so, what implications does this have for poor people in rural communities? Are there pathways rural communities might choose to take that enable them to benefit from agriculture-based livelihoods without risking longer-term ecosystem damage? Answering these questions is currently very difficult because a comprehensive understanding of the relationships between agricultural development, wealth distribution and socio-economic opportunity, governance systems, and ecosystem health is largely lacking for the smallholder farming systems typical of sub-Saharan Africa. There is, therefore, a major research challenge in this area that our proposed project aims to address.

We plan to explore the ecosystem limits to poverty alleviation in African forest-agriculture landscapes. Specifically, we plan to focus our work on a cocoa farming landscape in Ghana, and a coffee farming landscape in Ethiopia. Ghana and Ethiopia provide an opportunity to study forest-agriculture ecosystems that have contrasting recent development trajectories, levels of rural poverty and ecosystem health. In Ghana, agricultural development has significantly contributed to improved rural livelihoods but may have pushed forest-agriculture ecosystems beyond their limits; whereas in Ethiopia agricultural development is an important potential pathway out of poverty for the rural poor but it is unlikely to have pushed ecosystems beyond their limits yet.

By studying these contrasting situations, we hope to provide the scientific evidence that helps rural communities avoid the potentially detrimental effects of ecosystem degradation and hence have more sustainable livelihoods in the longer-term. To do this, we plan to explore (i) the limits to the services provided by forest-agriculture ecosystems resulting from agricultural expansion and intensification; (ii) the key social processes that maintain forest-agriculture ecosystems within these limits or move them beyond them; (iii) the role poverty plays in the processes that determine whether or not ecosystem limits are reached and exceeded; and whether ecosystem limits in turn affect poverty; and (iv) the potential pathways out of poverty rural communities might take; the potential risks ecosystem limits pose to these pathways; and how communities might act to reduce or minimize these risks.

Planned Impact

Who will benefit from our research?

The ultimate beneficiaries of our research will be poor people and local communities in rural areas in Ethiopia, Ghana and more widely in Africa whose lives and livelihoods depend upon forest-agriculture ecosystems. Our project aims to identify who in these communities is most dependent upon or vulnerable to ecosystem change in terms of poverty alleviation. We also plan to determine how these dependencies and vulnerabilities may change across communities in the future for better or for worse. In this way, our project will produce important contextual information about the specific groups of people in rural communities who are likely to benefit most from our research.

An important organisation that will benefit directly from our research is the Nature Conservation Research Centre (NCRC), who are an NGO based in Ghana working with local rural communities, and policy and decision-makers in Government, NGOs and business on a variety of issues related to the conservation of biodiversity and natural resources. They are a co-applicant of our proposal.

Our work will benefit policy and decision-makers in Government, NGOs and business who have an interest in agriculture, environment and rural development in the context of forest-agriculture ecosystems in Ethiopia and Ghana, and ultimately more widely in Africa.

Our project focuses on forest-agriculture ecosystems in Africa that cultivate important cash crops such as cocoa and coffee, so consumers of chocolate and coffee products could potentially benefit from our research.

How will these groups benefit from our research?

Understanding whether farm management practices are likely to push forest-agriculture ecosystems beyond their limits to sustain these practices is challenging because ecosystem changes can be relatively slow, complex and non-linear. Our project is designed to unravel this complexity in a way that enables farmers to better understand the relationships between their farming activities and ecosystem services, and potentially avoid any adverse impacts of ecosystem degradation. It will also help individual farmers and their communities to plan more effectively for change by developing a process that enables them to consider the potential economic, social and ecological consequences associated with a series of possible future actions. Ultimately, we aim to enable rural communities to make more sustainable decisions about how they manage and develop their agriculture-based livelihoods. Within our project, we plan to work directly with rural communities associated with our study landscapes, but we will also develop plans with policy and decision-makers in Government, NGOs and business to engage with rural communities more widely in Ethiopia, Ghana and potentially elsewhere beyond the lifetime of our ESPA project.

We plan to establish NCRC as a regional knowledge hub with expertise on the links between agriculture, environment and development that they can then use to provide improved assistance and advice to rural communities, policy and decision-makers, business and civil society in Africa within and beyond our ESPA project. Our research provides the major evidence-base for this work, and NCRC's active participation in our research provides hands-on experience for key members of its staff.

Decisions by Government, NGOs or business in the areas of agriculture, environment or development often focus on issues within these areas rather than on the inter-dependencies between them. The new knowledge generated by our research provides the evidence-base that enables decision-makers to consider issues in a more integrated way. This has potential implications for Government policy, assistance and advice given by NGOs, and sourcing policies by agri-buisness.

Our research provides new knowledge that potentially helps consumers make more informed decisions about the food and drink products they purchase.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The overarching aim of our research was to explore the ecosystem limits to poverty alleviation through agricultural development in forest-agriculture ecosystems in Ghana and Ethiopia, and to use this new knowledge to enable local rural communities and a range of other stakeholder groups to understand and respond to ecosystem limits and varying levels of social vulnerability in their decision-making processes. We addressed a series of questions which resulted in a series of clear policy/practice briefs on yields and livelihoods; cocoa and poverty; managing on-farm trees; resilience in farming systems and; transparency in transactions.
Exploitation Route The outcomes of this research are already being taken forward in real and practical ways as are outlined in the impacts sections below.
This work is being done with government, private sector, farmers and civil society partners.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment

URL http://www.ecolimits.org/project-impact.html
 
Description Our findings have been used in both study countries (Ghana and Ethiopia) in the articulation of national policy for our key study commodities of cocoa and coffee. In particular our findings have contributed to the national processes in both countries in articulating sub-national cocoa and coffee sector specific climate change emissions reductions programs. In both countries our findings have been fed into the design of specific climate-smart applied interventions with sector farmers with the Oromia Forest Landscape REDD+ Programme in Ethiopia (over USD180 million budget with World Bank and Norway) and the Ghana Cocoa Forest REDD+ Programme (over USD200 million budget with World Bank and private partners). Our work has also influenced the Global Framework of Action for No Deforestation Supply Chain Agreement between government and 42 private cocoa and chocolate industry companies which was executed at UNFCCC COP in November 2017. On-the-ground implementation of intervention sites in Ghana engaged our team in determining how to design detailed plans and approaches. Our organization has taken a lead role in the implementation consortium in two of the intervention landscapes. A total of ten private sector chocolate and cocoa trading companies have entered into funding agreements with specific landscapes to support implementation work. Ghana has reported initial emission reductions at scale as result of this work. Most recently additional global corporate companies have engaged with us to further support this work including Amazon.com and The Sovereign Wealth Fund of Singapore. Momentum has continued to build and the global LEAF Coalition has also engaged our work in Ghana.
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment
Impact Types Economic,Policy & public services

 
Description ESPA Targeted Activity Impact Award
Amount £43,000 (GBP)
Funding ID IAF-2017-18-003 
Organisation Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2017 
End 12/2017
 
Description Governance for ecosystem services and poverty alleviation
Amount £200,246 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/P008178/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 12/2016 
End 11/2017
 
Description Cocoa Landscapes in Ghana: Moving towards Standards 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact 65 professionals from private sector, civil society and industry bodies attended 3 day workshop held in Brussels. Participants were from Asia, Latin America, Africa and Europe.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Meeting with Ghana Cocoa Board and private sector cocoa companies 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact The Ecolimits research team shared the research objectives of the project, initial emerging results, and sought input on how best to use the research to have a direct impact on the cocoa sector.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Meeting with Government of Ghana's Forestry Commission--Wildlife Division 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact In Ghana, the Wildlife Division is responsible for management of national parks. This research is partially being conducted within Kakum National Park, and therefore the meeting was meant to inform the Park Manager and his staff about our current activities, share preliminary findings, and receive feedback.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Public Launch of "Learning About Cocoa Landscape Approaches: Ghana Guidance Document and Toolbox" 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact Over 100 cocoa/chocolate business representatives, government experts and media attended a public launch of new guidebook: "Learning About Cocoa Landscape Approaches: Ghana Guidance Document and Toolbox" in Ghana. The event was streamed online with international audience and local media coverage.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020