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Sowing the seeds of change – Gender-responsive climate-smart rice production Tran Tu Anh, Programme manager, CSA and Gender SNV Vietnam 1 Rice production in Vietnam • Vietnam: Very disaster prone, among the countries worse affected by climate change. Long coast, low land, complex geography. Yearly huge lost due to disasters • >70% population live income and food on weather based livelihoods and rice production -> very vulnerable to climate change. (7.6% poor rate to date). • Vietnam is among top rice producers and the 2nd-3rd rice exporters. • Rice cultivation (especially wet rice) emits huge GHG, incl. CH4, N2O, CO2 -> 57.5% GHG emission in agriculture 2 GHG emission Enteric fermentation 0.9 2.6 11.9 Vulnerability/Lost/damages 5.3 Manure management Rice cultivation 21.8 Agricultural soils 57.5 Burning of savannas Burning of agricultural residues 3 Socio-economic relevance • Massive production: In 2013, 4.2 mil ha paddy field, capacity 43 mil. metric tons, exporting 7.5 mil tons rice 2013 (3rd). Communist Party/Gov commits to sustain 1.8 mil. ha of rice production for food security. • Very low margin: extremely high inputs, backward floody rice farming techniques, low yield, high risks of lost due to disasters and price, extremely weak marketing 4 Emerging: - Advanced rice farming techniques: low input, low GHG, high yield, low risk - Marketing/Value chain development - Social inclusion/gender Ref: CSA according to FAO: • Sustainably increasing food security by increasing agricultural productivity and incomes; • Building resilience and adapting to climate change • Developing opportunities for reducing GHG emissions compared to expected trends 5 System of Rice Intensification (SRI) 1. Economic Low inputs High yield 2. Adaptation Resilient to CC 3. Mitigation 4. Environment GHG emission reduction Ecological Friendly 6 SRI key principles (direct seedling) Significant seed reduction (depend on variety/soil. 2-4 kg/ sao (500m2) for seeding by broadcast and less than 1.5 kg/Sao for seeding with Rows Drumseeder Alternative wetting and drying: four to five times after seeding until panicle formation, ensure adequate soil moisture; maintain 3-5 cm water level from panicle formation untill milky ripening stage; dry the field from dough ripening stage to harvest. Weeding and aerating the soil at the same time; Early weeding and keep free from weeds within the first 30 days after seeding. Soil conserve/restoration: Use organic fertilizer, bio-fertilizer, collect straw/stubble after harvest for compost; minimize use chemicals (fertilizers, pesticides). 1. Economic impact • Significant reduction of inputs: ~30-40% - Significant reduction of seeds inputs (i.e. from 5-6kg/sao – 2-3kg/sao) - Reducing chemicals, fertilizer and plant protection - Reducing water/watering costs - Increased yield (~20%) - Reduced lost and damages due to extremely weather events Increase yield: ~15% Cleaner rice can bring higher price Increase 20-25% income for farmers 8 2. Adaptation/Resilience • Adaptation: Higher resistance to climate risks/extreme weather events - Les density - Increase effective branches and plant strength – more resist to whirlwind, preventing collapse/damages - Les density – Reduce epidemics/diseases - AWD - Rice plant Roots stronger/longer – more resist to drought Resilience (community based) • Reduce inputs, farmers reduce risks of financial lost and have more savings • Disaster preparedness/contingency plan in rice crop (seasonal calendars, short-time variety) 9 3. Mitigation: significant reduction of GHGs emission Compared to traditional (keep field flooded, high volume of seed) • Reducing Methane CH4 emission: • Reducing N2O emission: • Applying Alternative Wetting and Drying: each crop 1/3 CH4 emission is reduced via keeping fields dry (non-flooded) at least one phase in a crop. Effective chemistry/bio-fertilizer management in SRI protocol control N2O emission, no-increase N20 in SRI field recognized. Reducing CO2: by not burning residues and re-use it for compos/bio-fertilizer IAE measured 4 crops and confirmed reduction 4 tons CO2e/crop in SRI field supported by SNV projects 10 4. Environment/Ecological friendly • Saving water: • Environment improvement: applying AWD, using less 25 – 50% water. Each crop, reducing 3-5 times pumping water in the field (also save pumping cost) Considerable reduction of chemical fertilizer, pesticide, use bio-fertilizer Reducing burning residue and re-use for compos/bio-fertilizer Soil conserve/restoration Breaking soil scum and soil preparation Use organic fertilizer, bio-fertilizer 11 SNV Project 1: Sustainable rice production • Title: “Sowing the seeds of change – Community based mitigation through sustainable rice production” (SSC-SRI) • Location: Quảng Bình và Bình Định (intervention) and national level (advocacy) • Duration: 05/2012 – 12/2015 • Project holder: SNV • Partners: DARD of Quang Binh and Binh Dinh, CASRAD, IAE, SFRI, IPSARD, provincial Women Union • Donor: Australian Government 12 Objectives Reduce GHG emissions and increase resilience of rice production through the application of SRI to small scale rice production systems Generate renewable energy from rice residues of husk and straw to reduce environmental waste and contamination. Develop market linkages and create “green rice” market opportunities for rice Build capacity of provincial level stakeholders (farmers, cooperatives, community, government, agriculture sector, mass organizations, millers/private sector) Create a knowledge platform to raise awareness and widely share lessons learnt 13 Project components 2. Reduce environmental waste and contamination - Renewable energy from rice residues 3. Market linkages and create “green rice” Market - Inclusive business 4. Capacity building, Knowledge management Advocacy – gender and social inclusion 1. GHG emission reduction Via SRI Low carbon & low risk farming technique 14 Raising awareness for ~ 40,000 farmers (on SRI, market, value chain, post-harvest management etc.) Capacity building for key agriculture personnel and cooperative (around 250 persons) SRI applied successfully: 5 crops since Dec 2012 – May 2015 in 1,000 ha rice field ~ 4,000 ha crops, increasing 15-20% yields in non-favorable weather condition in SRI field, increasing ~15% income for around 9,000 farmers households with more than 9,000 female. GHG emission measurement in 4 crops, confirming reduction ~ 4tons CO2e/ha/crop -> confirm reduction of 25% CH4 and N2O emission, SRI protocol and guidelines packages INDC, Provincial agriculture SRI upscaling plan, MARD Irrigation decision, 15 • Introduction of straw baling machines: 720 metric tons (Mt) of straw collected and utilized • Introduction of 4 rice husk briquetting machines: 280 - 560 Mt of rice husk briquetted and used to replace coal • Development of a sustainable supply chain for gasifier stoves 800 gasifier stoves commercially distributed (90% women users) Reduce household Indoor Air Pollution from cooking (for women, children) • 1,500 Mt of CO2 avoided from open-burning and fossil fuels use • 40 key local trainers in rice residue utilization and RE applications • 6,000 farmers trained on rice residue management for - 80% are women. • Economic savings from cooking + more local jobs created 16 Title 17 SNV Project 2: CSA and Women Economic empowerment • Title: “Enhancing Opportunities for Women Entrepreneurship” (FLOW/EOWE) • Location: Quảng Bình, Bình Định, Ninh Thuan and Binh Thuan (intervention) and national level (advocacy) • Duration: 2016 – 2020 • Project holder: SNV • Partners: Vietnam Women Union, MARD, VCCI, Vietnam Cooperative Alliance, provincial WU, DARD • Donor: Dutch Government DGIS (partly follow-up SSC project, and further development) 18 Project components 2. Business – CSA and women economic empowerment (Cooperatives, Primary producers, SMEs) 3. Enabling environment – policy influencing (gender sensitive, business/cooperatives promotion) 4. Capacity building, Knowledge management 1. Gender transformation – challenge norms 19 Targets 20,000 farmers including >10,000 women increase income through application of climate smart agriculture/advanced farming techniques (SRI) and enhanced agribusiness via key value chains: Rice and Horticulture Women’s business capacity, roles, voice, decision, leadership, workload, access to inputs, technology, market 20 cooperatives, 100 SMEs and production groups Gender sensitive policies enforcement; national target policies integrated gender equality 20 • • Key leads SRI protocol application in selected cooperatives (2016: 12 cooperatives, 900 ha; 2017: 1,000ha) Enhanced by women economic empowerment approach and expected outcome: - Women have stronger access to farming techniques, capacity building - Women leadership promoted – women lead farmers groups and cooperative board - Reducing field farming workload for women and men - Household dialogue for husband sharing house work - Socio-behaviour change communication and awareness raising in gender equality 21 Opportunities • Important attention from MARD and MONRE on SRI/lowcarbon, low risk farming technique and RE residues measures Rice re-structuring, INDC, New Rural development programme Market Gaps for Greener/cleaner rice • Strong commitment from local DARD, agriculture sector, women union and farmers, recognizing socio-economic benefit • Strong poverty reduction/socio-economic development solution • Effective linkage technical agencies and mass organization on socio-economic development and gender equality/women economic empowerment • Good cooperation from MARD/its institutes, Universities, institutes, NGOs and relevant stakeholders. 22 Challenges • Influences from agriculture materials suppliers companies (seeds, fertilizer) with huge promotion to sell more • Limitation of stable and favorable water management system and centralized water management context • Hesitance and conservative rice methodology (over consuming seeds and fertilizer, keep field floody etc) • Lack of national/regional mapping of soil/farming techniques, irrigation etc. for better crop/farming planning • Requirement of strong monitor on protocol application • Rice price drops while high yield gained especially success harvest (also influenced by world market). • MRV for rice, consistent GHG emission measurement and consensus of scientists on SRI/GHG 23 Thank you Tran Tu Anh, Programme manager Climate smart agriculture and gender (FLOW/EOWE, WEAVE, Gender/ClimateChange) SNV Vietnam Email: [email protected] 24