• Alternate Text

Water Institute - WI
Journal of Water Resources, Engineering, Management and Policy

JWEMPO

  • Home
  • Articles & Issues
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Articles
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Aims and Scope of Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Copyright
    • Indexed
    • Publication Guidelines
  • Information
    • For Authors
    • For Reviewers
    • For Readers
  • News
  • contact
  • Subscribe
  • Submit Article
  • Login/Register
  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Archives
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Aims and Scope of Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Copyright
    • Indexed
    • Publication Guidelines
  • Information
    • For Authors
    • For Reviewers
    • For Readers
  • Articles
  • News
  • contact
  • Subscribe
  • Submit Article
  • Login/Register

© 2025 Journal of Water Resources, Engineering, Management and Policy

Search Article
  • Home
  • Journal
Irrigation
  • Siamarie Lyaro, Comfort Magwaza
  • 23 December 2024 376 139
Impact of Rainfall and Temperature as Aspects of Climate Change on Maize Production in Zimbabwe
DOI: https://doi.org/10.56542/wi.jwempo.v1.i2.a4.2024
Download / view PDF

Keywords: Maize production, Climate change, ARDL, Granger causality test JEL Classification: D24, C12, C32

Abstract
Zimbabwe experiences variations in maize production such that production fell below 2.2 million tonnes between 2010 and 2021, making maize importation necessary despite implementing resilient agricultural practices for strengthening capacity for adaptation to climate change. This study sought to analyze impact of climate change on maize production in Zimbabwe from 1971 to 2021. The study focused on determination of long-run, short-run, and causality relationships between climate and non-climatic variables and maize production. The study used ADF unit root test to test stationarity of data. Autoregressive distributed lag model was employed to analyse long-run and short-run relationships, while Granger causality test was applied to analyse causal linkages. Results showed that in the long-run mean temperature (p = 0.001) and area (p = 0.017) were significant factors which affected maize production, while precipitation (p = 0.05) and area (p = 0.05) were significant factors which affected maize production in the short-run. Also, results from Granger causality test showed that there was a unidirectional causal linkage between precipitation and maize production (p-=0.004), and a unidirectional causal linkage between maize production and area under maize production (p-= 0.027). Generally, findings highlight the need for Government to invest in irrigation system to reduce over reliance on rain-fed maize production.

Vol. 1 No. 2 (2024)

Article Categories

  • Water resources 6
  • Management in Water sector 2
  • Engineering issues in Water sector 0
  • Irrigation 1
  • Sanitation and Hygiene 0
  • Research and Innovations 1
  • Technical and managerial issues in Water sector 0
  • Institutional development in Water sector 0
  • Financing and economic analysis of water facilities and infrastructure 1
  • National, Regional and International policies in Water sector 0
  • Sustainability of Water and Sanitation Projects 2
  • ICT in Water Management 0

Indexed

JWEMPO is indexed by EBSCO HOST

 

follow us

Useful Links

  • Ministry of Water
  • Water Institute
  • Webmail
  • International Maji Scientific Conference

Visitor Counter

000082123

  • Today: 12
  • Yesterday: 78
  • This Month: 1011
  • This Year: 14511

Copyright

For the manuscripts recommended for publication, the author(s) will be expected to sign the JWEMPO copyright assignment form. Where necessary the author(s) will need to obtain permission to publish material protected by [...] Read more

© 2025 JWEMPO. All Rights Reserved. Maintained by Water Institute - WI