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Tree Commodities And Resilient Green Economies in Africa

The book Tree Commodities and Resilient Green Economies in Africa is about tree crop commodities in Africa and it sought to examine how best Tree commodities can contribute to achieving sustainable development goals in Africa.

It is premised on the fact that tree commodities (such as coffee, cocoa, coffee, cashew, oil palm, rubber etc.) represent some of the continent’s fastest-growing land uses. These commodities support the livelihoods of millions of people and constitute an essential part of African economies. At least five countries in Africa are single tree commodity-dependent economies; seven more economies can be considered tree commodity-dependent when more than one tree commodity is considered.

But tree commodity farmers remain poor because prices remain low, and most crops are exported as raw materials or with little processing. As such, African countries capture very little of the total value of the commodity value chains. For example, the continent produces 75% of the world’s cocoa, but captures less than 10% of the commodity’s total market value. Fluctuating prices pose serious balance of payment challenges for economies, too.

YEAR
2021
AUTHORS
Minang PA , Duguma LA , Van Noordwijk M

 

REGION
Africa

 

 

Book chapters

Chapter 2

Pathways to achieving sustainable development goals through tree commodities in Africa

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Chapter 3

Concepts and methods for changing value chains: innovative tree-cropbased agroforestry systems

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Chapter 4

Innovation in a systems perspective

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Chapter 5

Evolutions and Innovations in the Cocoa Supply chain

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Chapter 6

Innovation pathways in the coffee sector in Ethiopia and Kenya

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Chapter 7

Cashew: An emerging tree commodity in African drylands for livelihoods improvement and ecosystem restoration

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Chapter 8

Shea Tree Crop Management in West Africa

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Chapter 9

The palm oil sector in Africa: The dynamics, challenges and pathways to sustainability

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Chapter 10

Natural Rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) Production and Prospects for Sustainable Economic Development in Africa

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Chapter 11

Opportunities and Challenges for Enhancing Small-scale Timber Production and Marketing in Africa

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Chapter 12

Fruit Trees in Agroforestry Systems: Complementing Globally Traded Commodities with Local Nutritional Benefits

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Chapter 13

Commodity tree crop planting material infrastructures in Africa

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Chapter 14

How much do cocoa and coffee contribute to livelihoods in Africa?

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Chapter 15

Institutional Innovations in Tree Crop Producer Organisations in Africa

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Chapter 16

Gender Equality as a Pathway to Sustainable Development of Cocoa and Coffee Value Chains in East and West Africa

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Chapter 17

Industrializing Africa through Tree Commodities

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Chapter 18

Negative environmental externalities within cocoa, coffee and oil palm value chains in Africa

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Chapter 19

Tree Commodities and Climate Change:Impacts and Opportunities

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Chapter 20

Potential of Biofuel and Bioelectricity Generation from Residues of Tree Commodities in Africa

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Chapter 22

Policy instruments for enhancing tree commodities

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Chapter 23

Fluctuating Tree Commodity Price: Perils and ways to reduce vulnerability

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Chapter 24

Rubber and oil-palm production and value addition in Asia: relevance for Africa

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Chapter 25

Eco-certified Coffee Agroforestry in Indonesia: Reconciling Conflicting Goals?

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Chapter 26

Cocoa and coffee in Asia: contrasts and similarities in production and value addition

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Chapter 27

Oil palm in Brazil: lessons from policies and agroforestry innovation

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Chapter 28

Vietnam’s Coffee Story: Lessons for African Countries

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Chapter 29

Sustainable green economies with tree commodities: the dominant narratives in Africa

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