← All articles

Photo · Gordon More

Stimulating small-scale farmer innovation and adaptation with Participatory Integrated Climate Services for Agriculture (PICSA): Lessons from successful implementation in Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean and South Asia

Graham Clarkson, Peter Dorward, Sam Poskitt, R. D. Stern, Dominic Nyirongo, Katiuscia Fara, John Mwangi Gathenya, Caroline G. Staub, Adrian Trotman, Gloriose Nsengiyumva, Francis Feehi Torgbor, Diana Giraldo · 2022 · Climate Services

Summary. PICSA is a participatory approach that trains smallholder farmers to use climate and weather information for agricultural decision-making. Evaluations across seven countries show 87% of trained farmers made beneficial changes to crops, livestock, or livelihoods. The approach succeeds by treating farmers as decision-makers, tailoring information to local contexts, and strengthening extension and meteorological services. Over 200,000 farmers in 23 countries have been trained, and the method is now integrated into policy and training programs.

Read the original

Cite this article

Clarkson, G., Dorward, P., Poskitt, S., Stern, R. D., Nyirongo, D., Fara, K., Gathenya, J. M., Staub, C. G., Trotman, A., Nsengiyumva, G., Torgbor, F. F., & Giraldo, D.. (2022). Stimulating small-scale farmer innovation and adaptation with Participatory Integrated Climate Services for Agriculture (PICSA): Lessons from successful implementation in Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean and South Asia. Climate Services. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cliser.2022.100298

Details

DOI
10.1016/j.cliser.2022.100298
Countries
South Africa, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Uganda, Guatemala, Barbados, India
Regions
Africa, Central America, Asia
Categories
climate-and-environment, agtech, innovation-networks
Added
2026-04-28