Climate Change, Land, Water, and Food Security: Perspectives From Sub-Saharan Africa
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Front. Sustain. Food Syst
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Abstract
The current and projected warming of the earth is unequivocal with humans playing a
strong role as both perpetrators and victims. The warming on the African continent is
projected to be greater than the global average with an increased average temperature
of 3–6◦C by the end of the century under a high Representative Concentration Pathway.
In Africa, the Sub-Saharan region is identified as the most vulnerable to the changing
climate due to its very low capacity to adapt to or mitigate climate change. While it is
common to identify studies conducted to assess how climate change independently
impacts water, land, or food resources, very limited studies have sought to address
the interlinkages, synergies, and trade-offs existing between climate change, water,
land, and food (WLF) resources as a system in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). The climate
change and WLF security nexus, therefore, seeks to address this shortfall in literature and
subsequently serve as a relevant source of information for decision-making and policy
implementation concerning climate change mitigation and adaptation. In this study, 41
relevant studies were selected from Web of Science, Google Scholar, ResearchGate, and
institutional websites. We provide information on the independent relationships between
climate change and WLF resources, and further discuss the existing inter-linkages
between climate change and the WLF security in SSA using the nexus approach, with
recommendations on how decision making and policy implementations should be done
using the climate change and WLF security nexus approach.