Litcius/Paper detail

Can sustainability certification enhance the climate resilience of smallholder farmers? The case of Ghanaian cocoa

William J. Thompson, Blaser-Hart W.J, Jonas Joerin, Pius Krütli, Evans Dawoe, Birgit Kopainsky, Erik Chavez, Rachael Garrett, Johan Six

2022Journal of Land Use Science27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sustainability certification has been posited as a key governance mechanism to enhance the climate resilience of smallholder farmers. Whilst many certifications now include climate resilience in their standards, their ability to deliver this for smallholders remains untested. We take the case of the 2015–16 drought-shock to cocoa production in Ghana to examine whether certification can enhance smallholder climate resilience. We used a novel transdisciplinary methodology combining participatory outcome definition with household surveys, biophysical measurements, satellite data and counterfactual analysis. Utilising our climate resilience framework, we find that certification has a strong effect on the adoption of basic management, e.g. fertilization, but a weak influence on more complex resilience strategies, e.g. agroforest diversification. Beyond certification, we identify strong regional patterns in resilience. These findings suggest that certification has some potential to enhance climate resilience but greater focus on facilitating diversification and adapting to sub-national contexts is required for improved effectiveness.

Topics & Concepts

CertificationSustainabilityEnvironmental resource managementResilience (materials science)BusinessClimate resilienceDiversification (marketing strategy)Climate changeAgricultural diversificationEnvironmental planningCorporate governanceNatural resource economicsEconomicsGeographyEcologyFinanceMarketingThermodynamicsBiologyManagementPhysicsAgricultural Innovations and PracticesAgriculture and Rural Development ResearchGlobal trade, sustainability, and social impact