TY - JOUR AV - public A1 - Palazzo, A A1 - Vervoort, J M A1 - Mason-D?Croz, D A1 - Rutting, L A1 - Havlík, P A1 - Islam, S A1 - Bayala, J A1 - Valin, H A1 - Kadi Kadi, H A A1 - Thornton, P A1 - Zougmore, R B TI - Linking regional stakeholder scenarios and shared socioeconomic pathways: Quantified West African food and climate futures in a global context UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2016.12.002 JF - Global Environmental Change SN - 09593780 PB - Elsevier N1 - The work presented in this article has been supported by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) with funds provided by the CGIAR Fund Council, Australia (ACIAR), European Union, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), New Zealand, Netherlands, Switzerland, UK and Thailand, the Global Futures and Strategic Foresight (GFSF) project, a CGIAR initiative led by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (grant #OPP1009468), and the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM). In addition to core project funding, this research benefitted from the European Commission FP7-funded project Healthy Futures (grant #266327). We sincerely thank the editor and the three anonymous reviewers of this paper for their thoughtful comments. We would also like to thank the participants in all of our scenario development and use processes for their active contributions to each process. Open Access funded by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. N2 - The climate change research community?s shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) are a set of alternative global development scenarios focused on mitigation of and adaptation to climate change. To use these scenarios as a global context that is relevant for policy guidance at regional and national levels, they have to be connected to an exploration of drivers and challenges informed by regional expertise. In this paper, we present scenarios for West Africa developed by regional stakeholders and quantified using two global economic models, GLOBIOM and IMPACT, in interaction with stakeholder-generated narratives and scenario trends and SSP assumptions. We present this process as an example of linking comparable scenarios across levels to increase coherence with global contexts, while presenting insights about the future of agriculture and food security under a range of future drivers including climate change. In these scenarios, strong economic development increases food security and agricultural development. The latter increases crop and livestock productivity leading to an expansion of agricultural area within the region while reducing the land expansion burden elsewhere. In the context of a global economy, West Africa remains a large consumer and producer of a selection of commodities. However, the growth in population coupled with rising incomes leads to increases in the region?s imports. For West Africa, climate change is projected to have negative effects on both crop yields and grassland productivity, and a lack of investment may exacerbate these effects. Linking multi-stakeholder regional scenarios to the global SSPs ensures scenarios that are regionally appropriate and useful for policy development as evidenced in the case study, while allowing for a critical link to global contexts. KW - Shared socioeconomic pathways KW - West Africa KW - Food and climate futures KW - Climate change KW - CCAFS scenarios KW - Food security KW - Land use KW - Agricultural area KW - Food demand KW - Agricultural production KW - Climate impacts KW - Crop productivity KW - Livestock productivity KW - Economic models Y1 - 2017/07// SP - 227 ID - icrisat10255 EP - 242 VL - 45 ER -