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Spatial Data and Analysis in Support of Improved Policy and Planning

Spatial Data and Analysis in Support of Improved Policy and Planning. Christopher Auricht chris@auricht.com John Dixon John.Dixon@aciar.gov.au ACIAR Canberra 21 June 2012. Talk outline. Context and Background Needs Issues and status of spatial data

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Spatial Data and Analysis in Support of Improved Policy and Planning

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  1. Spatial Data and Analysis in Support of Improved Policy and Planning Christopher Auricht chris@auricht.com John Dixon John.Dixon@aciar.gov.au ACIAR Canberra 21 June 2012

  2. Talk outline • Context and Background • Needs • Issues and status of spatial data • Methodology used in developing an updated farming systems dataset and analysis for Sub-Saharan Africa • Status and future work

  3. Facts • According to CGIAR analysis • One billion of the worlds poor within Africa and Asia (those living on less than $1 per day) are fed primarily by: • hundreds of millions of small-holder farmers (often with less than 2 ha of land, several crops, and a cow or two), or • Herders (most with fewer than five large animals) Solution • Develop sustainable farming systems that improve efficiency gains to produce increased food production

  4. One Billion People Suffer Chronic Hunger and Poverty

  5. Scale of Rural Hunger Trends in maize shortage in Zambia Percentage of farm households with maize shortage • Nearly one billion people experience debilitation, health-threatening hunger each year • 4 out of 5 of these people are rural farmers The Hunger Period

  6. Hunger Hotspots Superimposed on Farming Systems Source: InterACADEMY Council 2004

  7. Background • Business as usual investments in agriculture unlikely to deliver sustainable solutions in many countries • Numerous issues often identified as barriers to progress e.g. inefficiencies in program delivery, political uncertainty etc. These are not the only problem! • Existing systems (often under stress) have been, and are expected to continue to accommodate large increases in population, increasing urbanisation, rising demand for animal products and competition for land and water • Forecasts suggesting that current practices will not stay abreast with population growth, environmental change and increasing demand for animal products.

  8. Needs • Requires a strategic approach, an appreciation of scale, and an understanding of the interactions between and within systems

  9. The current ACIAR project www.fao.org/farmingsystems/ • Builds on the work of Dixon et al 2001

  10. 2001 Farming Systems and Poverty • Global study – part of the World Bank Rural Sector Review • Widely accepted as pioneering body of work – looked at things as a ‘surface’ across landscape not confined by country borders • Largely driven by LGP/AEZ and market access, supplemented by expert opinion • Extensively used to guide investment at the program level and frame analysis in numerous global studies • Approach focused on high level farming systems within six developing regions • Involved use of various thematic data layers to underpin the delineation, characterisation / description and subsequent analysis of systems

  11. Program Application

  12. Hunger Hotspots and Farming Systems

  13. Sub-Saharan Update • Farming systems website in FAO still one of the most visited sites within the organisation • Previous study 10 years old • Consistent seamless datasets somewhat limited in original work • In need of updating as spatial extent of systems and frame conditions changed e.g. climate, population, urbanisation, market access etc. • Many updated and new datasets available

  14. Current Situation • 2012 – Large quantity of potential datasets – approx. 300 alone in the Harvest Choice database  longitudinal and some predictive data now available • GAEZ 3.0 - 1,000’s of datasets representing 100’s of thematic layers • Challenge – which ones to use and how • Strategic approach • Access and collation • Assess (fit-for-purpose) and Prioritise (currency, coverage, scale etc) • Process  Products • Disseminate

  15. Methodology Delineate new Farming System Boundaries – Iterative process based on concept of central tendancy • Work in collaborative fashion with authors and other large data providers e.g. IFPRI – Harvest Choice, UN-FAO, ILRI, ICRAF, IIASA, CGIAR others . Characterise and describe systems Spatial and Tabular Data Statistics and Analysis

  16. Approach • Integration of new datasets – • LGP and Market access • Supporting Datasets • Population (rural, urban, total) • Livestock – cattle, sheep, goats, poultry, LU and TLU • Crop areas and production • Yield gaps • Protected areas • Poverty  $2.00 and $1.25 /day • Nutrition

  17. Hunger, Poverty & Productivity Spatial Covariates/Proxies & Analytical Flow Terrain, Demography, Infrastructure, Admin Units Production Environment & Constraints Production Systems & Performance Linkage to Macro Models Interventions/ Responses Crop Distribution & Yields Settlements, ports, markets Crop Suitability: Rainfed Wheat Agroecological Zones Port travel times & costs Market travel times & costs Slope, aspect, drainage Road, rail, river, ICT networks Elevation Administrative Units Yield Responses to Inputs, Management, CC Drought Incidence & Severity Runoff Pests & Diseases (Maize Stem Borer) Cropland extent & intensity Farming Systems Value of Production per Rural Person Profitability of small scale irrigation Quantity of Nutrients Removed Aggregate to FPUs Fertilizer Profitability Distribution of Welfare Benefits Source: HarvestChoice 2010

  18. Changes between 2001 and 2012

  19. Updated FS Boundaries and LGP

  20. Yield Gap – Aggregate of Major Crops

  21. Big questions for management and policy • What is it? • Where is it? • What are its characteristics and how does it operate ? • What are the risks/threats ? • What are the opportunities (Research / Extension) ? • How changing with time ? • Evaluation and Performance

  22. Spatial data • Tool to support process • Understand • Analyse • Develop interventions • Monitor • Not the answer in itself  • has limitations • Fit for purpose • Complement with expert knowledge

  23. Thanks • Acknowledgements • ACIAR • IFPRI – Harvest Choice • CGIAR • ILRI • ICRAF • FAO • IIASA • others • Questions & Discussion

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