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Exploring Socio-Economic Characteristics on Adoption Intensity of Biochar Among Farming Households in Sub-Humid Regions of Western Kenya

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dc.contributor.advisor
dc.contributor.author Kyalo, Annastacia Maitha
dc.contributor.author Mogaka, Hezron
dc.contributor.author Kirimi, Florence Kaumi
dc.contributor.author Kizito, Kwena
dc.contributor.author Ndirangu, Samuel Njiri
dc.contributor.author Onyari, Charles Nyambane
dc.contributor.author Muriithi, Lydia
dc.contributor.author Elvin, Otara Nyaboe
dc.contributor.author Mutungi, Scholastica Katava
dc.contributor.author Kiprotich, Shadrack
dc.contributor.author Njiru, Moses Muchangi
dc.contributor.author Kamau, Ezekiel Areri
dc.date.accessioned 2025-01-08T07:05:31Z
dc.date.available 2025-01-08T07:05:31Z
dc.date.issued 2025-01-08
dc.identifier.citation https://doi.org/10.22194/JGIAS/25.1608
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.embuni.ac.ke/handle/embuni/4458
dc.description.abstract Agriculture is a cornerstone of Kenya's economy, yet declining soil fertility and low adoption of sustainable agricultural technologies, such as biochar, have hindered productivity among smallholder farmers. Biochar is perceived to be a costeffective technology especially among resource constraint farming households. Despite many smallholder farmers acknowledging the importance of biochar as a soil amendment, most farmers face socio-economic barriers that hinder its adoption at scale. This study focused on how socio-economic factors influence adoption intensity of biochar, with a focus on the farming households in the sub-humid regions of Western Kenya. Employing a multistage stratified sampling procedure and Heckman selection model, the study reveals that awareness of biochar, access to credits, total land used in farming and education level positively and significantly influences adoption of biochar while total land owned in acres negatively and significantly influences adoption of biochar. Similarly, awareness of biochar, access to credits, and education level positively and significantly influences adoption intensity of biochar while terms of land ownership negatively and significantly influence adoption intensity of biochar. The study identifies awareness of biochar, education, credit access, and land ownership as key factors influencing its adoption by smallholder farmers. Promoting biochar as a soil amendment and carbon sequestration technique for farmers should be the main goal of the government, non-governmental organizations, and development organizations. Promoting the advantages of biochar for crop yields and soil fertility should be spearheaded by the Ministry of Agriculture's Extension Department. While development organizations offer financial assistance and training to promote adoption, policymakers should push farmer cooperatives to reduce the cost of biochar production and implementation en_US
dc.publisher UoEm en_US
dc.subject Soil bulk density en_US
dc.subject Microbial biomass carbon en_US
dc.subject Inverse mills ratio en_US
dc.subject Marginal effect en_US
dc.subject Robust standard error en_US
dc.title Exploring Socio-Economic Characteristics on Adoption Intensity of Biochar Among Farming Households in Sub-Humid Regions of Western Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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