Research Article // Are farmers willing to adopt climate-smart Water-Energy-Food-Environment Nexus designs? A case of olive producers in Crete using a participatory choice experiment
This paper investigates olive producers’ preferences for adopting climate-smart WEFE Nexus strategies in Crete, revealing that farmers tend to favor less technology-intensive practices such as pruning, underscoring the need for targeted policy interventions that promote awareness and support for advanced, resource-efficient solutions.
Introduction
Given a closing window of opportunity to address threats posed by climate change, its mitigation and adaptation are high on the agenda of researchers, policymakers, and the public. The Water-Energy-Food-Environment (WEFE) Nexus approach can prove useful in the planning and implementation of adaptation actions due to its multi-sectoral nature. In this study, we conduct a discrete choice experiment in Greece to elicit olive producers' preferences for groups of WEFE Nexus climate-smart strategies. Our findings suggest that farmers prefer to adopt less technology-intensive practices, and more common and conventional ones, such as pruning, are the most likely to be adopted. Results obtained highlight the importance for policymakers to increase awareness among agricultural producers, with a targeted approach to different groups of them (traditional, transitioning, environmentally conscious), about climate-smart practices with a special focus on the expected benefits from the adoption of more technology-intensive ones, and to provide technical advice.
Published
August 2025
In
Environmental Impact Assessment Review