Agritrop
Accueil

Ex-ante demand assessment and willingness to pay for human excreta derived co-compost: Empirical evidence from rural South Africa

Gwara Simon, Wale Edilegnaw, Lundhede Thomas Hedemark, Jourdain Damien, Odindo Alfred O.. 2023. Ex-ante demand assessment and willingness to pay for human excreta derived co-compost: Empirical evidence from rural South Africa. Journal of Cleaner Production, 388:135570, 13 p.

Article de revue ; Article de recherche ; Article de revue à facteur d'impact
[img] Version publiée - Anglais
Accès réservé aux personnels Cirad
Utilisation soumise à autorisation de l'auteur ou du Cirad.
1-s2.0-S0959652622051447-main (1).pdf

Télécharger (1MB) | Demander une copie

Résumé : Recovering plant nutrients from human excreta streams through circular bioeconomy initiatives like co-composting may offer a cross-sectoral solution to waste management, sanitation, and agriculture. However, the failure of composting innovations is attributed to a lack of a ready market for the compost produced. The current study hypothesizes that improving the desirable attributes of compost to the market through pelletization, fortification, packaging (with labelling), and certification of co-compost could enhance the market demand for co-compost. Socioeconomic variables such as income, religiosity, and environmental attitudes as measured by the new ecological paradigm, were also hypothesized to influence the willingness to pay for co-compost. Based on Lancaster's characteristics demand theory, the efficient Bayesian design, and the discrete choice experiment, we administered a mobile-based survey to 341 rural farmers. The conditional logit, random parameters, and latent class models show that the rural farmers were willing to pay for all the attributes included, especially certification by relevant authorities (ZAR1.70/kg) and fortification with inorganic mineral fertilizers (ZAR1.49/kg). The findings also indicate the influence of income, religiosity, and environmental attitudes on farmers' willingness to pay for co-compost. The results demonstrate the importance of addressing perceived and actual health risk through certification and the complementary role of co-compost in enhancing the agronomic efficiency of chemical fertilizers through fortification in farming systems. Redesigning compost to include the identified attributes could enhance its market appeal. Mainstreaming dissemination strategies and targeting customer segments could improve social acceptance of human excreta-derived compost in agriculture.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : économie agricole, engrais organique, fertilisation, gestion des déchets, compost, déchet organique

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Afrique du Sud

Mots-clés libres : Human excreta, Efficient design, Choice experiment, Co-compost, Willingness to pay, Demand assessment

Classification Agris : F04 - Fertilisation
U70 - Sciences humaines et sociales
E51 - Population rurale

Champ stratégique Cirad : CTS 2 (2019-) - Transitions agroécologiques

Agences de financement hors UE : Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Gwara Simon, University of KwaZulu-Natal (ZAF) - auteur correspondant
  • Wale Edilegnaw, University of the Free State (ZAF)
  • Lundhede Thomas Hedemark, University of Pretoria (ZAF)
  • Jourdain Damien, CIRAD-ES-UMR G-EAU (ZAF) ORCID: 0000-0001-8707-5221
  • Odindo Alfred O., University of KwaZulu-Natal (ZAF)

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/603493/)

Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop) Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop)

[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2024-01-29 ]