Litcius/Paper detail

South Africa’s increasing climate variability and its effect on food production

Mashudu Tshikovhi, Roscoe Bertrum Van Wyk

2021Outlook on Agriculture10 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study examines the impact of increasing climate variability on food production in South Africa, focusing on maize and wheat yields. A two-way fixed effects panel regression model was used to assess the climate variability impacts, analysing secondary data for the period 2000 to 2019 for nine provinces in South Africa. The study found that increasing climate variability has a negative impact on maize and wheat production in South Africa. Specifically, the results indicated a negative correlation between mean annual temperature with both maize and wheat yields. A decrease in precipitation affected maize yields negatively, while the impact on wheat yields was positive, although insignificant. This analysis, therefore, depicted that crop yields generally increase with more annual precipitation and decrease with higher temperatures. The study recommends that funding initiatives to educate farmers on increasing climate variability and its effects on farming activities in South Africa should be prioritised.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationAgricultureClimate changeEnvironmental scienceCropAgricultural productivityClimatic variabilityProduction (economics)AgronomyPanel dataGeographyAgricultural economicsBiologyEconomicsEcologyEconometricsMeteorologyArchaeologyMacroeconomicsClimate change impacts on agricultureAgricultural risk and resilienceCrop Yield and Soil Fertility