Type | Report |
Title | Tanzania: country situation assessment |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://prise.odi.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Low_Res_Tanzania-Country_Situation_Assessment.pdf |
Abstract | This Country Situation Assessment (CSA) report seeks to provide an initial analysis of the past and current climate in Tanzania and to identify solutions to the complex challenges of natural resource management, economic development, poverty alleviation and resilience-building in the context of climate change. It focuses on a few selected arid and semi-arid lands (ASALs) in the country and pays particular attention to rainfall climatology for the 1960-1990 and 1971-2000 baseline periods. The report indicates a slight decrease in rainfall in the latter climatological period. It also indicates that, although there has been no significant trend in rainfall at the central ASAL stations, there has been a significant positive temperature trend in both maximum and minimum temperatures at the two stations observed. The trend in minimum temperatures has been more pronounced and much faster compared with the trend in maximum temperatures. This result is consistent with the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) findings and other observations in different parts of the globe. Nevertheless, it is important, and it will be more useful, to obtain more elaborate temperature and rainfall datasets from more ASALs of Tanzania to enable a detailed and thorough analysis. Initial results also indicate that ASALs of Tanzania are endowed with various development opportunities. These include climate-smart agriculture, smallscale mining, sustainable pastoralism and community-based wildlife resource management. The roles of different actors in facilitating these opportunities will be the subject matter of future stakeholder engagement workshops and research that will aim to provide policy-makers with practical guidance on inclusive, climate-resilient development and to support emerging good adaptation practices within the ASALs of Tanzania. The report also identifies several challenges that affect livelihood systems and sustainable natural resource management in ASALs, both climatic and nonclimatic. Since climate change has implications for performance in several sectors, integrated approaches are necessary. These interventions need to consider the challenges and opportunities of various sectors (e.g. agriculture, livestock, water, energy, wildlife, forestry, mining, etc.) in ASALs in contributing to enhancing resilience. |
» | Tanzania - Population and Housing Census 2002 |