Factors Affecting the Adoption of Wildfire Management Technology in Ghana
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Published:2024-06-13
Issue:2
Volume:9
Page:51-64
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ISSN:2575-3061
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Container-title:International Journal of Natural Resource Ecology and Management
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language:en
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Short-container-title:IJNREM
Author:
Nunoo Isaac1ORCID, Asante Joseph1, Ansah Mercy1, Twumasi- Ankra Boakye1, Frimpong Benedicta2ORCID, Osei Eric1, Abu Daniel1, Mensah Evans1, Asante Angela1, Offei Paloma1, Hinneh Kwame1, Sekyere Kwame1
Affiliation:
1. Tropenbos Ghana, Kumasi, Ghana 2. Crops Research Institute of Ghana-CSIR, Kumasi, Ghana
Abstract
This study evaluates the factors that influence and limit the development of fire belts, a fire management technique used by Ghanaian farmers. We obtained primary data from three hundred farmers. Kendall's coefficient of concordance and the logit model were used. Awareness of fire belt creation as fire management technology was high, with a generally positive perception of fire belt creation. This methodology, however, was adopted by less than half of the farmers. Age, gender, marital status, type of crop grown by the farmer, access to community fire volunteers, FBO membership, awareness of technology, cost of technology, and ease of technology use are the factors that determine the incidence of adoption of fire belt creation. Major constraints in adoption include limited access to information, unavailability of assistance from GNFS, initial investment cost, illiteracy, unwillingness to adopt the technology, culture and traditions, time-consuming and difficulty in technology use and risk and uncertainty about the technological application. To improve the uptake of fire belt creation there is the need to form and strengthen community fire volunteers and group dynamics (FBOs) at the community level as it promises to promote fire belt creation as fire management technology and hence reduce wildfire risk in the communities.
Publisher
Science Publishing Group
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