drought insurance
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2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (18) ◽  
pp. 3031
Author(s):  
Sara E. Miller ◽  
Emily C. Adams ◽  
Kel N. Markert ◽  
Lilian Ndungu ◽  
W. Lee Ellenburg ◽  
...  

In arid and semi-arid regions of Eastern and Southern Africa, drought can be devastating to pastoralists who depend on healthy vegetation for their herds. The Kenya Livestock Insurance Program (KLIP) addresses this challenge through its insurance program that relies on a vegetation index product derived from eMODIS NDVI (enhanced Normalized Difference Vegetation Index). Insurance payouts are triggered when index values fall below a certain threshold for a Unit Area of Insurance (UAI). The objective of this study is to produce an updated, cloud-based NDVI product, potentially allowing for earlier payouts that may help herders to prevent, minimize, or offset drought-induced losses. The new product, named reNDVI (rapid enhanced NDVI), provides an updated cloud filtering algorithm and brings the entire processing chain to the cloud. Access to the scripts used for the processing described and resulting data is openly available. To test the performance of the new product, we provide a robust evaluation of reNDVI and eMODIS NDVI and their derived payout indices against historical drought, payouts provided, and mortality data. The implications of potential payout differences are also discussed. The products show good comparability; the monthly average NDVI per UAI has correlation values over 0.95 and MAPD under 5% for most UAIs. However, there are moderate differences when assessing year-to-year payout amounts triggered. Because the payouts are currently calculated based on the 20th and first percentile of index values from 2003–2016, payouts are very sensitive to even small changes in NDVI. Where livestock mortality was available, payouts for reNDVI and eMODIS had similar correlations (r = 0.453 and r = 0.478, respectively) with mortality rates. Therefore, with the potential reduced latency and updated cloud filtering, the reNDVI product could be a suitable replacement for eMODIS in the Kenya Livestock Insurance Program. The updated reNDVI product shows promise as a vegetation index that could address a pressing drought insurance challenge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 357-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix John ◽  
Russell Toth ◽  
Karin Frank ◽  
Jürgen Groeneveld ◽  
Birgit Müller

Drought ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 147-162
Author(s):  
Teresa Maestro ◽  
Alberto Garrido ◽  
María Bielza
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (104) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Ozan Evkaya ◽  
S Yildirak ◽  
A SelcukKestel
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 501-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Million A. Tadesse ◽  
Frode Alfnes ◽  
Olaf Erenstein ◽  
Stein T. Holden

2015 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. e0106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Ruiz ◽  
María Bielza ◽  
Alberto Garrido ◽  
Ana Iglesias

<p class="Abstract">Hydrological drought is expected to have an increasing impact on both crop and fruit yields in arid and semi-arid regions. Some existing crop insurance schemes provide coverage against water deficits in rain-fed agriculture. The Prevented Planting Program in the USA covers against drought for irrigated agriculture. However, drought insurance for irrigated agriculture is still a challenge for companies and institutions because of the complexity of the design and implementation of this type of insurance. Few studies have attempted to evaluate the risk of loss due to irrigation water scarcity using both stand-alone production functions and crop simulation models. This paper’s contributions are that it evaluates the suitability of AquaCrop for calculating drought insurance premiums for irrigated agriculture and that it discusses contract conditions and insurance design for hydrological drought risk coverage as part of a traditional insurance product, with on-field loss assessment in combination with a trigger index. This method was applied to an irrigation district in southern Spain. Our insurance premium calculation showed that it is feasible to apply this method provided that its data requirements are met, such as a large enough set of reliable small-scale yield and irrigation time series data, especially soil data, to calibrate AquaCrop. The choice of a trigger index should not be underestimated because it proved to have a decisive influence on insurance premiums and indemnities. Our discussion of the contract conditions shows that hydrological drought insurance must comply with a series of constraints in order to avoid moral hazard and basis risk.</p>


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