Evaluating economic costs and benefits of climate resilient livelihood strategies

Shuang Liu, S. Liu and Jeff Connor, J. Connor and James Richard Andrew Butler, J.R.A. Butler and I Komang Damar Jaya, I.K.D. Jaya and Aluh Nikmatullah, Aluh Nikmatullah Evaluating economic costs and benefits of climate resilient livelihood strategies. Publisher Elsevier Bv.

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Abstract

A major challenge for international development is to assist the poorest regions to achieve development targets while taking climate change into account. Such ‘climate resilient development’ (CRD) must identify and implement adaptation strategies for improving livelihoods while also being cost-effective. While the idea that climate resilience and devel�opment goals should be compatible is often discussed, empirical evaluations of the eco�nomic impacts of actual CRD investments are practically non-existent. This paper outlines a framework to evaluate economic returns to CRD and applies it in two adaptation strategies trialed in Nusa Tenggara Barat Province, eastern Indonesia. The evaluation framework is composed of three models: a household benefit cost model, a diffusion model, and a regional benefit cost model. The models draw upon the impact evaluation, technology diffusion, and risk assessment literatures, respectively. The analyzes are based on expert opinion and locally-derived information, and hence can be applied in data-poor situations typical of developing countries. Our results explore economic costs and benefits at the household and regional scale, and we identify key input variables that greatly influ�ence the economic returns of the strategies. These variables should therefore be a focus of ongoing investment. We also discuss how the framework is more generally applicable, its limitations including challenges in accounting for less tangible social and ecosystem ser�vice benefits, potentially leading to the underestimation of impacts, and how the approach should be complemented by qualitative methods.

Item Type: Other
Keywords (Kata Kunci): Adaptation strategies Impact evaluation Benefit cost analysis Monte Carlo analysis Risk assessment Simulation modeling
Subjects: S Agriculture > S Agriculture (General)
Divisions: Fakultas Pertanian
Depositing User: Ir. Aluh Nikmatullah, M.Agr.Sc.,Ph.D
Date Deposited: 17 Mar 2021 00:18
Last Modified: 17 Mar 2021 00:18
URI: http://eprints.unram.ac.id/id/eprint/21410

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