1. Introduction
Global scientists have repeatedly shown that climate change is a significant problem for both developed and developing countries, as the pace of climate change is much faster than previously predicted [
1]. It has been demonstrated that agricultural productivity worldwide has been dramatically altered by regular climate change [
2]. Additionally, it has been estimated that climate change will impact the world food security by the middle of the 21st century [
3]. Climate change positively affects agricultural production or the crop yield in higher-income, high-latitude, and mid-latitude countries. However, a negative effect on the agriculture sector’s output is faced by lower-income and lower-latitude countries [
4]. Because most South Asian countries are low-income, lower-latitude countries, recurrent climate change harms most people’s food security in these regions [
5]—the production of South Asian cereal is expected to decrease by up to 30% from 2001 to 2059. Moreover, the gross per capita water loss is expected to reach up to 37% [
3].
Bangladesh is an agro-based country where climate change is a crucial factor that has adversely affected its crop production for a long time. The agriculture sector contributes about 16.77% to the GDP, with crops comprising 9.49%, livestock 1.84%, fisheries 3.68%, and forestry 1.76%, considering the catastrophic effects of climate change. Additionally, about 47.5% of Bangladesh’s employees are employed in the sector and receive more than 75% of foreign exchange earnings, with export earnings of
$899 million [
6]. However, Bangladesh’s rice and wheat production will have decreased by 8% and 32%, respectively, in the year 2050 versus the base year 1990 [
7]. This reduction is unavoidable because of changes in rainfall patterns related to rising temperatures, extended droughts, floods, and increases in sea-level salinity [
8]. Furthermore, studies at the national level using crop models, assuming temperature and CO
2 level variables, have exhibited decreased rice production throughout all seasons. One study compared figures for 2050 to the base year 1990 [
9]. The production of the two extremely essential rice varieties (Aman and Aus) will be reduced by 1.50–25.8 percent for the variety of Aus and 0.4–5.3 percent for the variety of Aman by 2050, respectively, due to high temperatures [
10]. Due to climate change, a 20% and 50% decrease was observed for developing modern varieties of ‘Boro rice’ for the years 2050 and 2070, since rice is susceptible to climatic conditions. The research predicted that any harmful alterations in climatic influences (relative humidity, temperature, precipitation, and period of bright sunshine) would adversely affect rice yields, so farmers must efficiently adapt to climate change. Bangladesh might establish adaptive responses to climate change to mitigate these impacts, despite significant climate-related difficulties [
11].
Empirical studies recognize that adaptation to climate change may minimize its detrimental effects, protect poor farmers’ livelihoods, and strengthen all possible advantages a farmer might benefit from [
12,
13]. Adaptation refers to adaptation to ecological, physical, human, or socio-economic environments in reaction to recognized vulnerability or anticipated and real climate stimuli and their impacts on climate change [
14,
15,
16]. Considering climate change is necessary because adjustments in agricultural management practices adapt to climate condition changes [
17]. It is a policy choice for reducing climate change’s detrimental impact on crop production [
18]. This policy choice can mitigate the exposure to gradual climate change (salinization and sea-level rise) and severe climatic events, such as floods and droughts [
19]. Additionally, by enhancing climate change, adaptive capabilities can reduce the vulnerability of the agricultural system [
20,
21]. There are two autonomous or expected adaptive reactions. Autonomous adaptation refers to individual farmers’ or agricultural organizations’ behavior, while regional, national, and international organizations are involved in planned adaptation. Anticipated adaptation is constructing climate-specific infrastructure, regulations, and incentives implemented by farmers and organizations to supplement, improve, and promote responses [
22]. The grading of adaptation methods is incremental and transformative [
23]. Comprehensive adaptation strategies are short-term reactive interventions that concentrate on preserving the existing system in which deliberate decision-making methods are transformative adaptation strategies.
In designing and implementing successful adaptation strategies in reaction to climate change, adaptive capacity is essential. It decreases the risk and severity of adverse climate-related consequences, as it highlights the tools available to mitigate existing vulnerability to climate hazards. A body of literature on rice has shown that a farm’s susceptibility to climate change influences exogenous and endogenous climate factors [
16]. Human methods, that is, labor-oriented farms, such as ecosystems and biological species, have the intrinsic potential to develop their development strategies so that they become more adapted to local environmental and climatic conditions [
15]. Through adaptation in the farming system, farmers may improve their abilities to cope with different degrees of climate shocks. Since adaptive capacity is the human or natural system’s ability to effectively respond to climate variability, these adaptation capacities help mitigate the risk of extreme climatic events’ possible adverse effects [
3]. Several alternatives are available to farmers to help them cope with climate change; several can enhance the soil fertility and humidity, making them ideal for expanding the adaptive capacity, and most can improve crop production sustainably. Changing irrigation, crop varieties, planting trees, soil conservation, the use of clay soil, the diversification of crops and livestock, early and late planting, increasing plant spacing, and adjusting the degree and timing of fertilizer application are the most common adaptation options [
17,
18,
24,
25,
26,
27]. Farmers can cope with current and future climate shocks by employing both conventional and newly created adaptation choices that are locally relevant in Bangladesh, such as changing dates of plantations, early rice varieties, mixed cropping, the use of organic/chemical fertilizers, varieties of drought-tolerant rice, farming near water bodies to achieve enhanced irrigation, the establishment of shallow tube wells in a pond, the construction of dams, crop rotation, tree integration on rice farms, and species of a short duration [
28,
29,
30]. However, there are numerous obstacles, including a lack of knowledge and poor access to credit and perfect information, property, and a shortage of water, to implementing adaptation strategies [
25,
26,
31].
Because of the increase in up to date information, climate-smart agriculture (CSA) approaches are becoming a more relevant strategy for addressing climate change challenges and their effects on food security. A lack of financial and other vital resources prevents a more widespread adoption of CSA activities in low- and middle-income countries. In the face of climate change and severe weather, implementing maximum CSA was shown to increase the food security in Southern Malawi [
32]. In developing countries, CSA is becoming increasingly crucial for achieving rural development and environmental sustainability goals. In southern Malawi, program participation in implementing CSA activities is positive and statistically significant [
33]. The prospect of financing in organic soil amendments is positively affected by cooperative membership, which is statistically significant. In China, tenure stability, human resources, the farm size, and access to credit all positively and significantly affect the likelihood of joining a cooperative and investing in soil quality initiatives [
34].
Farmers in Bangladesh are more sensitive to climate change. Due to this reason, they cannot adapt to climate change with limited information and technology [
35]. Despite Bangladeshi farmers’ vulnerability to climate change, rigorous studies are limited to farmers’ preferences for perceived obstacles, adaptation strategies, and policy consequences [
36]. However, whilst many studies have investigated the effect of climate change on adaptation strategies and their determinants in Bangladesh, there have been no quantitative studies on climate change adaptation strategies for reducing the risk of rice production. To calculate the effects of the adaptive ability on rice technology development, this analysis applies quantitative techniques to assess the capacity for adaptation strategies relating to climate change and econometric methods. Additionally, there are several policy options and investment capital for climate hazard adaptation strategies, such as cyclones and floods in Bangladesh [
37,
38]. However, little has been done to establish drought-resilient adaptation strategies for the Rajshahi District agriculture sector in Bangladesh [
39]. Therefore, concerning Rajshahi, which is a relentless drought-vulnerable area of Bangladesh, the current study attempts to develop our perception on the adaptive ability of rice farmers to adopt climate change strategies to reduce rice farmers’ risk to adaptation strategies relating to climate change. Do policymakers and technocrats need to know the current level of farmers’ adaptive capacity to adapt climate change strategies to reduce the climate change risk relating to rice production? Does more extraordinary agronomic practice influence rice’s outstanding production, and does a lower adaptation capacity influence lower rice production? How efficiently do farmers have to adapt to the strategies accessible for adaptation? Therefore, the study intends to measure rice farmers’ climate change adaptation strategies for reducing the technology development risk of rice production. The study’s findings can be used as an input for prioritizing and designing sector-specific program interventions and contributing to the fragile rice production system in the study area and other areas of Bangladesh with the same characteristics.
4. Discussion
This study describes the adaptive capacities of farmers engaged in rice production in relation to adaptation strategies addressing climate change and the degree of adaptive capacities to reduce the rice production development risk. The review uses rice farmer opinions about climate change adaptation strategies, and for this reason, presents the following attributes: Awareness; usage; accessibility; availability; and consultation. As there was variability in farmer decision-making actions, there was a key obstacle to understanding possible adaptive responses of farmers. Although external factors do not influence individual behavior, an individual’s perception of climate change is affected by agriculture’s internal characteristics. Considering the understanding of climate change, the behavior found in this study is highly complex and frequently influenced by very personal factors, such as debt, family breakups, or the availability of off-farm income.
This research classifies rice farmers’ adaptive capacities for adaptation strategies relating to climate change as low, moderate, and high adaptation degrees. The double logarithmic Cobb–Douglas production function was employed to evaluate the impacts of rice farmers’ adaptive capacities for adaptation strategies of climate change on rice production in Rajshahi, Bangladesh. Using a dummy variable, this model only considered a high and low adaptive ability and excluded a moderate adaptive capacity. The study found that the farmer’s capacity is more homogeneous and very similar to a low adaptive capacity. The range of farmers’ moderate adaptive capacities is 0.33 per AveAdapCapj < 0.66, but we noticed from the data analysis that more than 40 out of 77 farmers with moderate adapters have a value of 0.34 to 0.40 adaptive capacities. The outcome of this study shows that farmers in Rajshahi, Bangladesh are highly adaptive to changing the date of the plantation, varieties of rice that mature early, and types of drought-tolerant rice.
In contrast, farmers are somewhat adaptive to agronomic practices such as organic/chemical fertilizer, mixed cropping, farming near water facilities, increased irrigation, and well-built shallow tubes in ponds. They are inadequately adaptive to embankments, the integration of trees on rice farms, and crop rotation. Therefore, it seems clear that farmers are highly adaptive to agronomic practices that are easy to adopt (changing the date of the plantation, varieties of early maturing rice, and varieties of drought-tolerant rice). Simultaneously, they are inadequately adaptive to more costly practices (e.g., crop rotation, dam building, and the integration of trees on rice farms), where up-front investment costs can be a significant barrier to adaptation. The result shows that variations in adaptive capacities are caused by differences in knowledge, use, and consultation. The high score of these three attributes determines the farming households’ high adaptive capacities and vice versa. Generally, the study area farmers are somewhat adaptive to adaptation strategies of climate change, as this is justified by the average capacity of adaptation value of 0.52. Still, only 16.5% of farmers have high adaptation capacities, whereas 45.0% of farmers have low adaptation capacities, for the study area. We can conclude that rice production in the study area is significantly affected by the degree of adaptation to climate change, the amount of labor employed, the quantity of fertilizer used, the farm size, and the extension contact. It verifies that farmers in the study area with high adaptation capacities achieve a greater rice output, whereas farmers with low adaptive capacities produce less rice output. This means that high degrees of adaptation reduce the risk of rice production.
5. Conclusions
This study’s motive was to assess farmers’ adaptation strategies of climate change to reduce the rice production risk in Rajshahi, Bangladesh. Rajshahi was chosen as a study area because it is characterized by deficient rainfall, a high temperature, and drought. Rice farming is the main livelihood-supporting occupation in this area. The study used 400 randomly selected data from rice farming households. The findings and field-level experiences found that the rice farmers who have less education are poorly adaptive to climate change adaptation strategies. The farmers who are poorly adaptive to climate change adaptation strategies achieve a lower rice output. The study found that the proper adaptation of a particular method indirectly depends on consultation with agriculture extension officers to provide information about climate change and adequate adaptation strategies for agronomic practices to reduce the climate change risk in the rice production process. The study demonstrates that rice farmers should be empowered with high adaptive capacities by effective agronomic practices at the local level in Bangladesh. This is essential because the most dominant factor determining the variability between low and high adaptive farmers is consultation with agriculture extension officers. It also demands more detailed information on the weather forecast and extreme climatic events.
Based on the results of the study, it can be concluded that rice-producing farmers can adapt well in areas that fit into the well-known and applied technological systems. Knowledge related to the new sowing time, water supply, or fertilization is not a very expensive answer, but it is still part of adaptation. Adaptation areas, which no longer apply at the farm level and to several units of an affected ecological area, are no longer part of the adaptation reactions in the study area. The design of water protection dams, the introduction of the tree installation program, the establishment of protective tree plantations, and the use of crop rotation to support biodiversity and thus adaptation are not part of the overall adaptation strategy. Complex knowledge of ecosystems was not required in previous production practices. The effects of climate change require extra knowledge and cooperation with competitors and market participants, which was unprecedented in the previous period. Therefore, adaptation to climate change justifies increased external support for farmers, which is accompanied by more serious climate protection investments. The most important of these is the launch of state programs related to the construction of (non-farm level) water protection dams and the launch of a tree installation program supporting the protection of rice-growing areas for the necessary microclimatic environment.
The farmers may quickly understand the climatic change and take the necessary steps to adapt to the changing climate. Farm-level adaptation should be encouraged through policies that emphasize the vital position of providing knowledge on improved production techniques and raising farmers’ awareness of climate change. Community education represents the most successful way to accelerate adaptation and improve household decision-making about adaptation strategies. Government agencies should encourage a growing scientific awareness and the introduction of modern climate-adapted rice cultivation technologies and biotopes.