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Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience in Agriculture: Strategies for Sustainable Development in South Asia

Conference @ IFMR GSB, KREA University

Start time:

March 17 @ 8:00 am - March 19 @ 7:00 pm

IST

Location:

IFMR Graduate School of Business, KREA University, Sri City/Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, 517646

Type:

Other

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Description

Climate change is an increasing issue in the twenty-first century, threatening people’s lives and livelihoods worldwide (Vatsa et al., 2023). It has a significant impact on agriculture (Fahad et al., 2023). Climate changes, such as rising temperatures, rainfall variations, droughts, floods, and cyclones, have an enormous effect on the agricultural sector, causing uncertainty in farmers’ livelihoods and threatening a country’s food security and economic growth. South Asia, which includes India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka, is extremely sensitive to climate change consequences because of its diverse agro-climatic zones and substantial reliance on agriculture (IPCC, 2013). Agriculture generates the most jobs and contributes significantly to the region’s GDP. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projects that South Asia will experience a temperature increase of 1.56–5.44 °C by 2080, depending on future development scenarios (IPCC, 2007). It will impact crop yields and agricultural productivity. For instance, Lobell et al. (2012) indicate that a 1°C increase in temperature could reduce rice yields by about 10% and wheat yields by 7% in South Asia.

As countries in the region begin to respond to climate-related risks in agriculture, such as through national action plans or policies, there currently needs to be more focus on local-level dynamics in agricultural systems. Smallholder farmers are particularly vulnerable to stresses and shocks such as rainfall variability, droughts, floods, and cyclones (Bhattacharyya & Werz, 2012). Farmers in South Asia constantly search for strategies to adapt to climate-related risks in agriculture. Adaptation to climate change encompasses any

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Start: 11 Dec 2025
Deadline
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