The Role of Climate Services in Supporting Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia
Abstract
1. Introduction
- (i)
- provide an overview of historical and projected climate trends in Ethiopia to contextualize risks;
- (ii)
- examine the policy frameworks guiding climate adaptation and how they integrate climate information;
- (iii)
- capture the perspectives of both users and providers of climate services through structured surveys; and
- (iv)
- provide recommendations to strengthen the relevance, accessibility, and impact of climate services for national and subnational adaptation planning.
2. Description of the Study Area
2.1. Location and Topography
2.2. Climate Profile of Ethiopia
3. Data Sources and Methodology
3.1. Data Sources
3.2. Methodology
3.2.1. General Overview
- (i)
- users of climate information, including policymakers and practitioners from various sectors and administrative levels; and
- (ii)
- technical staff from the Ethiopian Meteorological Institute (EMI), based at both headquarters and regional centers.
3.2.2. Climate Change Projection
3.2.3. Desktop Review
3.2.4. Conducting Surveys
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Observed Climate Variability, Trends, and Change in Ethiopia
4.1.1. Observed Rainfall and Temperature Variability, and Historical Trends
4.1.2. Future Rainfall Projections in Ethiopia
4.1.3. Future Temperature Projections in Ethiopia
4.2. Climate Change in Ethiopia: Impacts and Adaptation Efforts
4.2.1. Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture
4.2.2. Climate Change Impacts on Water Resources
4.2.3. Climate Change Impacts on Human Health
4.3. Ethiopia’s Adaptation Efforts: National Strategies, Polices, and Plans
5. The Role of Climate Services in Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia
5.1. Climate Services in Ethiopia
5.2. Analysis of Survey Results on Climate Services in Ethiopia
- The importance of EMI’s climate data, information, and services to the users and their institutions.
- The level of satisfaction users have with the accessibility, quality, accuracy, and timeliness of EMI’s products and services.
- Staff understanding of EMI’s mission and the concept of climate services.
- Staff perceptions of how well EMI is delivering on its mission and fulfilling its mandate.
- Levels of self-assessed performance among staff and their satisfaction with the overall performance of the institution.
5.2.1. Presentation of Survey Results for Users
- Importance of EMI services and what information products are most important
- ii.
- Satisfaction with EMI products and services
5.2.2. Presentation of Survey Results for EMI Staff
- Understanding of weather climate services provided by EMI
- ii.
- Satisfaction with the performance of the Institution and that of their own
- iii.
- Satisfaction with their work at the institution
5.3. Use of Climate Services for Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia: Challenges and Opportunities
5.4. Challenges
5.5. Analysis of Survey Results on the Use of Climate Information for Climate Change Adaptation
6. Conclusions
- Investing in technical capacity and modern infrastructure, including automatic weather stations, high-performance computing, and improved data dissemination systems.
- Promoting co-production of climate information by fostering closer collaboration between providers and users to ensure climate services are demand-driven and actionable.
- Enhancing integration of climate services into national and subnational planning, ensuring that climate information informs policies and plans across sectors.
- Strengthening institutional coordination to reduce duplication of efforts and enhance the collective impact of climate services on adaptation outcomes.
- Improving outreach and accessibility, particularly for rural and vulnerable communities, through tailored communication strategies and partnerships with extension services and communities.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| No | Data Type | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Surveys | Survey responses from policymakers, sectoral experts, and EMI employees |
| 2 | Desktop review | Relevant government policy, planning, and operational documents related to climate change adaptation as well as journal review papers |
| 3 | Climate analysis | Rainfall and temperature observations (1991–2020) from EMI, gridded ENACTS datasets |
| 4 | Climate change projection | Selected key parameters from a subset of CMIP6 models (AWI-CM-1-1-MR, CanESM1, ACCESS-CM2, and FGOALS-g3) |
| Climate | Trends (1985–2014) |
| Historical (1985–2014) | All models show relatively stable annual rainfall (~800–1200 mm) during the historical period, with minor inter-annual variability and no drastic trends in rainfall increase or decrease, suggesting a baseline of moderate climate stability. |
| Scenario | Projections (2015–2100) |
| SSP2-4.5 | (Moderate Mitigation): Rainfall increases gradually but remains within historical variability (~1000–1400 mm by 2100) and least extreme changes across models |
| SSP3-7.0 | (High Challenges): Higher variability, with some models (e.g., UKESM1) projecting spikes (~1600 mm) and others (e.g., AWI-CM-1-1-MR) showing more modest increases) UKESM1: Shows sharp spikes under SSP3-7.0 |
| SSP5-8.5 | (ACCESS-CM2: Very High Emissions): Most extreme projections RF (~1800 mm by 2100) UKESM1: Shows sharp spikes indicating high climate sensitivity exceeding (~1600 mm by 2100) AWI-CM-1-1-MR and CAMS-CSM1: More conservative in projections, with smoother trends (~1400 mm by 2100). |
| Climate | Trends (1985–2014) |
| Historical (1985–2014) | All models show relatively stable Tmax (~27–29 °C) with minor inter-annual variability and no drastic warming trends, suggesting a baseline of moderate temperature stability |
| Scenario | Projections (2015–2100) |
| SSP2-4.5 | (Moderate Mitigation) shows Tmax increases gradually, reaching ~29–30 °C by 2100 and least extreme changes across models |
| SSP3-7.0 | (High Challenges) indicates faster warming, with Tmax reaching ~30–31 °C by 2100 and higher variability in some models (e.g., ACCESS-CM2) whereas SSP5-8.5 Other models (e.g., AWI-CM-1-1-MR) show milder increases (~30–31 °C) |
| SSP5-8.5 | AWI-CM-1-1-MR indicates more conservative, with Tmax reaching ~30 °C under SSP5-8.5 FGOALS-g3 and CanESM5 show intermediate trends, with Tmax peaking at ~30–31 °C ACCESS-CM2 projects the highest Tmax extremes under SSP5-8.5 (~33 °C by 2100) and suggests accelerated warming after 2050. |
| Climate | Trends (1985–2014) |
| Historical (1985–2014) | models show relatively stable Tmin (~14–18 °C) during the historical period, with minor fluctuations and no drastic cooling or warming trends, indicating a baseline of moderate |
| Scenario | Projections (2015–2100) |
| SSP2-4.5 | SSP2-4.5 (Moderate Mitigation Tmin increases gradually, reaching ~16–18 °C by 2100 and least extreme changes across models |
| SSP3-7.0 | SSP3-7.0 (High Challenges); Faster warming, with Tmin rising to ~17–19 °C by 2100 and higher variability in models like CNRM-ESM2 |
| SSP5-8.5 | SSP5-8.5 (Very High Emissions); Most extreme warming on CNRM-CM6 and CNRM-ESM2 project Tmin up to ~18–20 °C by 2100 and EC-Earth3-Veg-LR FGOALS-g3 show milder increases (~17–18 °C). CNRM-CM6 and CNRM-ESM2: Project the highest Tmin extremes under SSP5-8.5 (~20 °C), suggesting accelerated nighttime warming, EC-Earth3-Veg-LR: More conservative, with Tmin peaking at ~17 °C under SSP5-8.5 and FGOALS-g3: Shows intermediate trends, aligning closely with EC-Earth3-Veg-LR. |
| Regional PM | Federal PM | Regional Exp | Federal Exp | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very likely | 19 | 24 | 18 | 29 |
| Somewhat likely | 36 | 40 | 39 | 35 |
| Neutral | 25 | 19 | 24 | 26 |
| Not very likely | 14 | 10 | 14 | 8 |
| Not likely at all | 6 | 7 | 6 | 1 |
| Regional PM | Federal PM | Regional Exp | Federal Exp | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weather observations | 16 | 22 | 16 | 33 |
| Weather forecast (Climate prediction) | 53 | 63 | 48 | 47 |
| Climate data analysis | 18 | 6 | 21 | 17 |
| Climate change projections | 5 | 5 | 4 | 1 |
| Climate change adaptation | 8 | 4 | 12 | 2 |
| Regional PM | Federal PM | Regional Exp | Federal Exp | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very satisfied | 17 | 30 | 27 | 40 |
| Satisfied | 58 | 53 | 47 | 50 |
| Neutral | 21 | 11 | 22 | 9 |
| Dissatisfied | 3 | 6 | 3 | 1 |
| Very dissatisfied | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Response Category | Value (%) |
|---|---|
| Long range forecasts | 33 |
| Climate monitoring | 12 |
| Analysis and assessment based on historical data | 10 |
| Historical climate data | 6 |
| El Nino monitoring and outlooks | 5 |
| Climate change projections | 5 |
| Long term trends | 6 |
| Others (please specify) | 3 |
| Response Category | Value (%) |
|---|---|
| Very unlikely | 20 |
| Unlikely | 29 |
| Neutral | 32 |
| Likely | 12 |
| Very likely | 8 |
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Tola, F.T.; Dadi, D.K.; Kenea, T.T.; Dinku, T. The Role of Climate Services in Supporting Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia. Land 2025, 14, 2251. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112251
Tola FT, Dadi DK, Kenea TT, Dinku T. The Role of Climate Services in Supporting Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia. Land. 2025; 14(11):2251. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112251
Chicago/Turabian StyleTola, Fetene Teshome, Diriba Korecha Dadi, Tadesse Tujuba Kenea, and Tufa Dinku. 2025. "The Role of Climate Services in Supporting Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia" Land 14, no. 11: 2251. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112251
APA StyleTola, F. T., Dadi, D. K., Kenea, T. T., & Dinku, T. (2025). The Role of Climate Services in Supporting Climate Change Adaptation in Ethiopia. Land, 14(11), 2251. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112251

