Dryland Systems: South Asia Peter Craufurd, ICRISAT, India Photo courtesy GRAVIS
Jul 06, 2015
Dryland Systems: South Asia
Peter Craufurd, ICRISAT, India
Photo courtesy GRAVIS
Inception phase
2
• Identifying key partners
• Analysis macro-level data
• Regional workshops to identify: ― Sites and priority production &
livelihood systems
― Observed changes in systems
― Major drivers of change & future trajectories of change
― Research hypotheses and activities
• Initiation baseline data collection
Action sites/target research areas
Chakwal
Raisen
Rajasthan
Bijapur
Anantapur
Country LGP<90d(km2)
LGP 90-180d (km2)
India 606,665 1,241,768
Pakistan 786,262 78,100
Afghanistan 527,819 86,686
Rationale for Action Site selection
• Extensive & intensive crop-livestock & livestock systems
• Black & red soil systems
• Rainfed, stored soil moisture & irrigated systems
• Areas highly vulnerable to natural resource degradation
• Areas undergoing rapid change (e.g. migration, non-farm employment)
• Areas with poor livelihood indices
• Country/policy comparisons
Partners
Regional coordinator: ICRISAT
CGIAR partners: Bioversity, CIP, ICARDA, ICRAF, ILRI, IWMI
NARS partners: Indian Council Agricultural Research (ICAR), Indian Agricultural Ministries, Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC), Ministry of Agriculture (Afghanistan)
Agricultural Universities: University of Agricultural Sciences, Karnataka; Acharya NG Ranga Agricultural University, Andhra Pradesh
National & State-based NGOs: BAIF, GRAVIS
Key research areas
Land use change (ha) Jaiselmer
Others/Rangelands to Rainfed-single crop (SC) 110,900
Others/Rangelands to Irrigated-SC/double crop (DC) 2,394
Rainfed-SC to Irrigated-SC/DC 95,331
Rainfed-SC to others 25,175
Mapping of land-use change & biomass assessment via remote-sensing & physical measurement
Key research areas
Agro-Biodiversity assessment
• Agro-biodiversity survey tool developed
• Surveys planned in Rajasthan, Bijapur & Anantapur in 2013
Key research areas
Household livelihood, technology adoption & vulnerability analyses
• >15 villages representing different production systems identified
• Baseline data from ~1000 households collected
• Data will be analysed to characterise communities & to help target research
Photo courtesy GRAVIS
Key research areas
Gender & climate change
Joint activity with CGIAR Climate Change program (CCAFS)
• Setting up climate-smart villages in Bijapur & Anantapur
• Identifying role of social institutions, social capital and social networks in adaptation processes & practices
• Mobilising & supporting building social capital
• Identifying technologies that are gender-friendly
Key research areas
Technology & policy options
• Identifying technologies & policies that have worked in Action Sites with partners
• Use models to assess potential value/benefits/trade-offs of interventions
• With partners, testing & scaling-up and out of technologies, e.g.• Soil-test based nutrient application & improved
cultivars• Agricultural water management• Improved livestock feeding systems
Key Research Areas
Institutional innovation & change
Component 2009-10 2012 Kharif
Area (m ha) 0.2 3.73
No. of Villages 1,440 26,293
No. of farmers (millions) 0.2 4.39
No. of farmer facilitators 517 9,700
No. of lead farmers 1,867 45,000
Scaling up ‘Bhoochetana’ in Karnataka, India
Thank you!
ICRISAT is a member of the CGIAR Consortium