Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects
In the West African Sahel, climate variability and climate change pose huge challenges to food security and health, particularly for poor and marginalised population groups. Co-production of actionable climate information between scientists and users has been advocated to increase its use in climate...
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doaj-7cf9e72e958542bea3e61f27480d3cfb2021-06-25T04:49:29ZengElsevierClimate Services2405-88072021-04-0122100216Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effectsGenowefa Blundo-Canto0Nadine Andrieu1Nawalyath Soule Adam2Ousmane Ndiaye3Brian Chiputwa4CIRAD, UMR Innovation, F-34398 Montpellier, France; Univ Montpellier, F-34090 Montpellier, France; Corresponding author at: CIRAD, UMR Innovation, 73 avenue Jean-François Breton, 34 398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France.CIRAD, UMR Innovation, International Center for Tropical Agriculture, Decision and Policy Analysis Research Area, Cali, Colombia; Univ Montpellier, F-34090 Montpellier, FranceCIRAD, UMR Innovation, F-34398 Montpellier, France; Univ Montpellier, F-34090 Montpellier, FranceAgence Nationale de l'Aviation Civile et de la Météorologie (ANACIM), Dakar, SenegalWorld Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Nairobi, KenyaIn the West African Sahel, climate variability and climate change pose huge challenges to food security and health, particularly for poor and marginalised population groups. Co-production of actionable climate information between scientists and users has been advocated to increase its use in climate change adaptation. Consequently, Weather and Climate Services (WCS) co-production models have been expanding, but there have been few evaluations of their effects. Those that exist mostly focus on the end user. The empirical contribution of this paper is an evidence-based evaluation of the scaling of WCS based on co-production models in Senegal. The methodological contribution is a systemic and iterative evaluation method involving multiple analytical tools. The scaling of WCS in Senegal involved at least 161 actors and resulted in five axes of transformation: 1) continuous improvement of WCS, 2) emergence and consolidation of WCS facilitators, 3) inclusion of WCS in action planning, 4) active mobilisation to sustain WCS scaling, and 5) empowerment of actors. New users and uses emerged beyond agriculture, involving the fisheries, water and energy sectors, producing changes in institutional communication strategies, operational planning, and in coordination between actors. Enabling factors for scaling included capacity strengthening, knowledge-sharing and action platforms, interaction opportunities, and financial and political support. However, reduced precision of forecasts over time is perceived. New challenges are emerging including improving delivery and finer grain information, getting the private sector involved, and building capacity and trust at a large scale, to keep pace with the increase in uses and usershttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405880721000042AdaptationWest AfricaInnovationForecastsOutcomesWeather and Climate Services |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Genowefa Blundo-Canto Nadine Andrieu Nawalyath Soule Adam Ousmane Ndiaye Brian Chiputwa |
spellingShingle |
Genowefa Blundo-Canto Nadine Andrieu Nawalyath Soule Adam Ousmane Ndiaye Brian Chiputwa Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects Climate Services Adaptation West Africa Innovation Forecasts Outcomes Weather and Climate Services |
author_facet |
Genowefa Blundo-Canto Nadine Andrieu Nawalyath Soule Adam Ousmane Ndiaye Brian Chiputwa |
author_sort |
Genowefa Blundo-Canto |
title |
Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
title_short |
Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
title_full |
Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
title_fullStr |
Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
title_full_unstemmed |
Scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in Senegal: Evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
title_sort |
scaling weather and climate services for agriculture in senegal: evaluating systemic but overlooked effects |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Climate Services |
issn |
2405-8807 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
In the West African Sahel, climate variability and climate change pose huge challenges to food security and health, particularly for poor and marginalised population groups. Co-production of actionable climate information between scientists and users has been advocated to increase its use in climate change adaptation. Consequently, Weather and Climate Services (WCS) co-production models have been expanding, but there have been few evaluations of their effects. Those that exist mostly focus on the end user. The empirical contribution of this paper is an evidence-based evaluation of the scaling of WCS based on co-production models in Senegal. The methodological contribution is a systemic and iterative evaluation method involving multiple analytical tools. The scaling of WCS in Senegal involved at least 161 actors and resulted in five axes of transformation: 1) continuous improvement of WCS, 2) emergence and consolidation of WCS facilitators, 3) inclusion of WCS in action planning, 4) active mobilisation to sustain WCS scaling, and 5) empowerment of actors. New users and uses emerged beyond agriculture, involving the fisheries, water and energy sectors, producing changes in institutional communication strategies, operational planning, and in coordination between actors. Enabling factors for scaling included capacity strengthening, knowledge-sharing and action platforms, interaction opportunities, and financial and political support. However, reduced precision of forecasts over time is perceived. New challenges are emerging including improving delivery and finer grain information, getting the private sector involved, and building capacity and trust at a large scale, to keep pace with the increase in uses and users |
topic |
Adaptation West Africa Innovation Forecasts Outcomes Weather and Climate Services |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405880721000042 |
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