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Content Type
Author or Institution as Author
Alemneh Dejene
Co-authors

Makoala V. Marake, Selvaraju Ramasamy, Stephanie Midgley

Date of publication
Edition or Version
1.00
Institution
FAO
Language
Gender marker
Youth marker
Description/Abstract

In many parts of southern Africa, agricultural production is stagnant or even in decline, particularly in subsistence and smallholder agriculture. The reasons are many and debatable, but include lack of suitable inputs for production, environmental constraints and degradation, inadequate agricultural infrastructure, external shocks including volatile markets, and social stresses such as the impacts of HIV/AIDS and growing poverty. As an additional stressor, increasing climate variability and climate change are impacting on agricultural livelihoods since resource-poor farmers are unable to cope with multiple stressors or adapt to climate-related risks. The Kingdom of Lesotho is a typical example of a country considered highly vulnerable to climate-related challenges: as one of the least developed countries (LDCs), it is over-reliant on rainfed agriculture for food production and has a large poor rural population engaged in subsistence farming, which is relatively undiversified.

Keywords
Climate Smart Agriculture
CSA
Strengthening Capacity
Climate Change Adaptation
Contact institution (for further information)
FAO
CCARDESA Category

Funding Partners

4.61M

Beneficiaries Reached

97000

Farmers Trained

3720

Number of Value Chain Actors Accessing CSA

41300

Lead Farmers Supported