Early assessment of seasonal forage availability for mitigating the impact of drought on East African pastoralists
2016
VRIELING A. | MERONI Michele | MUDE Andrew | CHANTARAT Sommarat | UMMENHOFER Caroline | DE BIE Kees
Pastoralist households across East Africa facemajor livestock losses during drought periods that can cause persistent poverty. For Kenya and southern Ethiopia, an existing index insurance scheme aims to reduce the adverse effects of such losses. The scheme insures individual households through an area-aggregated seasonal forage scarcity index derived fromremotely-sensed normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) time series. Until recently, insurance contracts covered animal losses and indemnity payouts were consequently made late in the season, based on a forage scarcity index incorporating bothwet and dry season NDVI data. Season timing and duration were fixed for thewhole area (March–September for long rains, October–February for short rains). Due to demand for asset protection insurance (pre-loss intervention) our aim was to identify earlier payout options by shortening the temporal integration period of the index.We used 250 m-resolution 10-day NDVI composites for 2001–2014 from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). To better describe the period duringwhich forage develops, we first retrieved per-pixel average season start- and end-dates using a phenologicalmodel. These dates were averaged per insurance unit to obtain unit-specific growing period definitions. With these definitions a new forage scarcity index was calculated. We then examined if shortening the temporal period further could effectively predict most (N90%) of the interannual variability of the newindex, and assessed the effects of shortening the period on indemnity payouts. Our analysis shows that insurance payouts could be made one to three months earlier as compared to the current index definition, depending on the insurance unit. This would allow pastoralists to use indemnity payments to protect their livestock through purchase of forage, water, or medicines.
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