Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture: A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

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Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture : A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption. / Gemtou, Marilena; Kakkavou, Konstantina; Anastasiou, Evangelos; Fountas, Spyros; Pedersen, Soren Marcus; Isakhanyan, Gohar; Erekalo, Kassa Tarekegn; Pazos-Vidal, Serafin.

In: Sustainability (Switzerland), Vol. 16, No. 7, 2828, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gemtou, M, Kakkavou, K, Anastasiou, E, Fountas, S, Pedersen, SM, Isakhanyan, G, Erekalo, KT & Pazos-Vidal, S 2024, 'Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture: A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption', Sustainability (Switzerland), vol. 16, no. 7, 2828. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16072828

APA

Gemtou, M., Kakkavou, K., Anastasiou, E., Fountas, S., Pedersen, S. M., Isakhanyan, G., Erekalo, K. T., & Pazos-Vidal, S. (2024). Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture: A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption. Sustainability (Switzerland), 16(7), [2828]. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16072828

Vancouver

Gemtou M, Kakkavou K, Anastasiou E, Fountas S, Pedersen SM, Isakhanyan G et al. Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture: A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption. Sustainability (Switzerland). 2024;16(7). 2828. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16072828

Author

Gemtou, Marilena ; Kakkavou, Konstantina ; Anastasiou, Evangelos ; Fountas, Spyros ; Pedersen, Soren Marcus ; Isakhanyan, Gohar ; Erekalo, Kassa Tarekegn ; Pazos-Vidal, Serafin. / Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture : A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption. In: Sustainability (Switzerland). 2024 ; Vol. 16, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{7b293cd3000a4a10b94d112681e27c01,
title = "Farmers{\textquoteright} transition to climate-smart agriculture: A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption",
abstract = "Agriculture is currently facing major challenges related to ensuring the food security of a rising population and climate change with extreme weather patterns. At the same time, agriculture is a cause of environmental degradation, pollution and biodiversity loss. Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) is proposed as an approach that provides a roadmap to sustainable agricultural development. Despite this, farmer adoption rates of CSA practices and technologies in Europe remain low. This paper seeks to systematically review and synthesize the factors that facilitate or hinder farmers{\textquoteright} uptake of CSA in Europe. Out of the 2827 articles identified in the Web of Science and Scopus databases, a total of 137 research articles were included for analysis following the PRISMA methodology. The factors are categorized into seven categories, namely socio-demographics, psychological, farm characteristics, practice/technology-related attributes, biotic/abiotic, systemic and policy factors, with the majority of the studies focusing on the first four categories, while systemic and policy factors are relatively understudied. The results highlight for the first time that the adoption of CSA does not depend solely on farmer characteristics but also on the food systems and structures in which farmers operate, as well as the interactions with other value chain actors. To promote the adoption of CSA practices, extension and advisory services along with access to timely and reliable information, play a vital role in increasing awareness and in the provision of training and the encouragement of farmers{\textquoteright} behavioral shifts towards sustainable practices. From a technological point of view, adapting technologies to be easy to use, compatible with current farming objectives and cost-efficient will render them less risky investments for farmers and will foster adoption rates. Finally, support from the government in terms of financial support, subsidies and reduced bureaucratic procedures is crucial for motivating CSA adoption.",
keywords = "adoption process, climate-smart agriculture, decision-making factors, food systems",
author = "Marilena Gemtou and Konstantina Kakkavou and Evangelos Anastasiou and Spyros Fountas and Pedersen, {Soren Marcus} and Gohar Isakhanyan and Erekalo, {Kassa Tarekegn} and Serafin Pazos-Vidal",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 by the authors.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.3390/su16072828",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "Sustainability",
issn = "2071-1050",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Farmers’ transition to climate-smart agriculture

T2 - A systematic review of the decision-making factors affecting adoption

AU - Gemtou, Marilena

AU - Kakkavou, Konstantina

AU - Anastasiou, Evangelos

AU - Fountas, Spyros

AU - Pedersen, Soren Marcus

AU - Isakhanyan, Gohar

AU - Erekalo, Kassa Tarekegn

AU - Pazos-Vidal, Serafin

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 by the authors.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Agriculture is currently facing major challenges related to ensuring the food security of a rising population and climate change with extreme weather patterns. At the same time, agriculture is a cause of environmental degradation, pollution and biodiversity loss. Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) is proposed as an approach that provides a roadmap to sustainable agricultural development. Despite this, farmer adoption rates of CSA practices and technologies in Europe remain low. This paper seeks to systematically review and synthesize the factors that facilitate or hinder farmers’ uptake of CSA in Europe. Out of the 2827 articles identified in the Web of Science and Scopus databases, a total of 137 research articles were included for analysis following the PRISMA methodology. The factors are categorized into seven categories, namely socio-demographics, psychological, farm characteristics, practice/technology-related attributes, biotic/abiotic, systemic and policy factors, with the majority of the studies focusing on the first four categories, while systemic and policy factors are relatively understudied. The results highlight for the first time that the adoption of CSA does not depend solely on farmer characteristics but also on the food systems and structures in which farmers operate, as well as the interactions with other value chain actors. To promote the adoption of CSA practices, extension and advisory services along with access to timely and reliable information, play a vital role in increasing awareness and in the provision of training and the encouragement of farmers’ behavioral shifts towards sustainable practices. From a technological point of view, adapting technologies to be easy to use, compatible with current farming objectives and cost-efficient will render them less risky investments for farmers and will foster adoption rates. Finally, support from the government in terms of financial support, subsidies and reduced bureaucratic procedures is crucial for motivating CSA adoption.

AB - Agriculture is currently facing major challenges related to ensuring the food security of a rising population and climate change with extreme weather patterns. At the same time, agriculture is a cause of environmental degradation, pollution and biodiversity loss. Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) is proposed as an approach that provides a roadmap to sustainable agricultural development. Despite this, farmer adoption rates of CSA practices and technologies in Europe remain low. This paper seeks to systematically review and synthesize the factors that facilitate or hinder farmers’ uptake of CSA in Europe. Out of the 2827 articles identified in the Web of Science and Scopus databases, a total of 137 research articles were included for analysis following the PRISMA methodology. The factors are categorized into seven categories, namely socio-demographics, psychological, farm characteristics, practice/technology-related attributes, biotic/abiotic, systemic and policy factors, with the majority of the studies focusing on the first four categories, while systemic and policy factors are relatively understudied. The results highlight for the first time that the adoption of CSA does not depend solely on farmer characteristics but also on the food systems and structures in which farmers operate, as well as the interactions with other value chain actors. To promote the adoption of CSA practices, extension and advisory services along with access to timely and reliable information, play a vital role in increasing awareness and in the provision of training and the encouragement of farmers’ behavioral shifts towards sustainable practices. From a technological point of view, adapting technologies to be easy to use, compatible with current farming objectives and cost-efficient will render them less risky investments for farmers and will foster adoption rates. Finally, support from the government in terms of financial support, subsidies and reduced bureaucratic procedures is crucial for motivating CSA adoption.

KW - adoption process

KW - climate-smart agriculture

KW - decision-making factors

KW - food systems

U2 - 10.3390/su16072828

DO - 10.3390/su16072828

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:85190368052

VL - 16

JO - Sustainability

JF - Sustainability

SN - 2071-1050

IS - 7

M1 - 2828

ER -

ID: 398553095