A cost–benefit analysis of the production system with improved and climate-resilient sorghum varieties in southern Mali

Coulibaly, A B and Badolo, F and Yila, J O and Koné, B and Nebie, B and Worou, N and Jumbo, M B and Savadogo, K (2025) A cost–benefit analysis of the production system with improved and climate-resilient sorghum varieties in southern Mali. Frontiers in Climate, 6. 01-12. ISSN 2624-9553

[img] PDF - Published Version
Available under License ["licenses_description_cc_attribution" not defined].

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Given the persistently low adoption rate of improved sorghum varieties over decades, it is relevant to assess whether it is profitable or not to grow these varieties in Mali. Over the past years, little evidence has demonstrated the profitability analysis as decision-support information regarding the adoption of improved sorghum varieties. This study used cost-benefit analysis to assess the profitability of two Improved and Climate-Resilient Sorghum Varieties (ICRSVs), “Soubatimi and Tiandougou-coura” compared to the “Local” ones, using three years of average yield data (2017, 2018, and 2020) in Sikasso region, Mali. The objective was to perform a consistent cost-benefit analysis through net income, cost-benefit ratio, and gross profit margin. The study used a farm partial budget framework, sensitivity analysis, and stochastic dominance analysis methods. A final sample of 31 farmers’ on-farm trials under the fertiliser package of “100 kg complex cereal and 50 kg urea” per hectare was held as the agronomic package. The key findings showed that both varieties were profitable, with 79,661 CFA (123.56 USD) and 45,073 CFA (69.91 USD) average net incomes corresponding to 1.54 and 1.32 CBR, and 34 and 24 percents average gross profit margins, respectively, while growing the “local” varieties was not profitable, with an average loss of 12,113 CFA (18.79 USD) with 0.91 CBR and 10 percent average gross profit margin. In light of these results, the study suggests a large dissemination of the ICRSVs in Mali. Policy-makers should facilitate the implementation of outreach programs to inform smallholder sorghum farmers on the ICRSVs’ traits and profitability information as decision support tool for a larger adoption.

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Research Program : West & Central Africa
CRP: UNSPECIFIED
Uncontrolled Keywords: CBA, profitability, stochastic dominance, improved and climate-resilient sorghum, Mali
Subjects: Others > Climate Resilient Technologies
Mandate crops > Sorghum
Others > Mali
Depositing User: Mr Nagaraju T
Date Deposited: 05 Sep 2025 08:35
Last Modified: 05 Sep 2025 08:35
URI: http://oar.icrisat.org/id/eprint/13315
Official URL: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/climate/artic...
Projects: Enhancing Crops Productivity and Climate Resilience for Food and Nutrition Security in Mali
Funders: European Union under the Development Smart Innovation through Research in Agriculture
Acknowledgement: The authors are grateful to Vincent Garin for his useful suggestions for the statistical analysis. We also thank Mamourou Sidibe for his support in the data collection process, Hadidjatou Nana Sogodogo for generating the map of the study area, and all participant sorghum farmers and farmer leaders for their endeavours during the field survey data collection.
Links:
View Statistics

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item