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Content Type
Author or Institution as Author
Jonathan E Hickman
Co-authors

Robert J Scholes, Todd S Rosenstock, C.Pérez García-Pando, Justice Nyamangara

Date of publication
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Description/Abstract

There are few direct measurements of anthropogenic climate-forcing emissions in Africa, making it difficult to accurately assess current emissions and to anticipate changes in future emissions. Emissions databases suggest that sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), home to less than 15% of the world's population, is responsible for 11% of anthropogenic methane (CH4) and 18% of anthropogenic nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions globally, though this includes substantial emissions from biomass burning that would occur in the absence of contemporary anthropogenic activity, and which may be over-estimated. SSA is also an important source of precursors to the greenhouse gas tropospheric ozone, and of mineral dust, which has a range of impacts on climate. Eliminating food insecurity and poverty is likely to take priority over greenhouse gas mitigation in the region, so innovations in mitigation must focus on ways to reduce emissions as an ancillary benefit of improving livelihoods.

Keywords
CO2,
Emissions,
Mitigation,
Livelihoods
Citation

Jonathan E Hickman, Robert J Scholes, Todd S Rosenstock, C.Pérez García-Pando, Justice Nyamangara. (2014). Assessing non-CO2 climate-forcing emissions and mitigation in sub-Saharan Africa. p.7. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877343514000438

CCARDESA Category

Funding Partners

4.61M

Beneficiaries Reached

97000

Farmers Trained

3720

Number of Value Chain Actors Accessing CSA

41300

Lead Farmers Supported