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Modelling individual farmer behaviours in Coupled Human Natural Systems under changing climate and society

Project description

Farmers behaviour impact on climate change

Climate change can reduce agricultural productivity. As rising temperatures, fewer rainfalls, floods and droughts become frequent phenomena, addressing the issue has become vital. Individual farmers’ responses are instrumental in reducing vulnerability and assuring durability to multifactional irrigation systems. The EU-funded MODFaBe project proposes modelling farmers behaviour as well as informing market actors about the efficiency of alternative methods of intervention. It will assess farmers’ behaviour on the Muzza irrigation district in Milan, northern Italy. The project will also investigate the extent to which behaviour modelling can make farming more sustainable, flexible and adaptable to climate change.

Objective

Agriculture is one of the sectors most affected by climate change, especially in lower latitude areas, were climate change will result in increased temperature, reduced rainfall, and increased frequency of extreme weather events such as floods and droughts. Water and food nexus, often embedded in seemingly endless ecological, social and political interactions, are context-dependent, socially constructed and technically uncertain. Modelling techniques have been recognized, also in social sciences, as effective computational techniques to simulate social influence processes in human-nature systems from interactions within community of individual agents. The aim of the proposal is to reduce the vulnerability and improve the resilience of multifunctional irrigation systems to climate change scenarios by modelling individual farmer’ behaviour and informing managers and decision-makers about the effectiveness of different types of interventions. Through the combination of qualitative and quantitative methods and evidence-based analysis from social learning process (survey sample, interviews, statistical analyses, behavioural modelling simulations, artificial intelligence), insights are collected on how individual farmer and key stakeholders behave with respect to climate change adaptation in Coupled Human Natural Systems (CHNS), such as hydrosocial systems (e.g. multifunctional irrigation systems). A key question in today climate change adaptation research will be addressed: Can behaviour modelling help farmers to promote actions and anticipate decisions to adapt to climate change and become more sustainable and resilient? The assessment of farmer’ behavioural on climate change adaptation measures will be conducted on the Muzza irrigation district, located southeast of the city of Milan (Northern Italy). Modelling human behaviour can be used as a safe laboratory for policy experimentation, testing the effectiveness of strategies and policy measures on climate change.

Coordinator

POLITECNICO DI MILANO
Net EU contribution
€ 171 473,28
Address
PIAZZA LEONARDO DA VINCI 32
20133 Milano
Italy

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Region
Nord-Ovest Lombardia Milano
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
€ 171 473,28