Abstract
It is now widely accepted that climate change is happening and that future
changes will impact on many aspects of society, including agriculture. To maintain food
supplies, the agricultural industry must address climate change adaptation. Key to this is the
attitudes of those within the industry likely to have responsibility for adapting. This study
investigated stakeholder attitudes towards adaptation to climate change in the livestock
industry. Findings reveal four attitudinal groups. First, there is a ‘farmer-focused group’ that
has a positive attitude about the ability of livestock farmers to adapt to climate change, but
that also has the opinion that they will need additional support to adapt. Second, there is an
‘incentive for enterprise, anti-GM (genetic modification) group’ with an attitudinal position
stressing that the government should have a role in implementing regulations and providing
finance. This group has a negative attitude towards GM technology and does not think it
will be the answer to climate change. Third, there is an ‘information and education group’
whose attitude is that the provision of information is crucial for ensuring that the livestock
industry adapts. Fourth, there is a ‘pro-technology group’ who have a positive attitude
towards GM technology and who are therefore willing to embrace it as the route to
adaptation. Three of these four groups favour soft adaptations that maintain flexibility
within the system, and only the fourth is of the opinion that adaptive capacity is not an issue
and that the industry is ready to implement hard adaptations.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 207 - 222 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change |
Volume | 17 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Print publication - Feb 2012 |
Bibliographical note
53810128Keywords
- Adaptation
- Attitudes
- Climate change
- Livestock industry