Coffee growers receive support for
effective water resource management
Coffee farming
households in five Vietnamese Central Highlands provinces have recently
benefitted from the project ‘More coffee with less water- towards a reduction
of the blue water footprint in coffee production’, funded by Nestlé
Corporation and the Swiss Agency for Cooperation and Development (SDC), with
support from German EDE Consulting and many other local partners, including
the Western Highlands Agriculture and Forestry Sciences Institute (WASI).
Farmers are now accessible to more effective and economical irrigation against previous time
After a period of survey and test
implementation, the project was officially kicked off in April this year and
will run through to 2019.
The overall goal of the project-
valued two million euros in the total funding- is to ensure equitable and
sufficient water availability for all water users in Vietnam’s Central
Highlands and to obtain pivotal water savings through improved irrigation
management in the coffee sector.
Also, the project aims to reach out
to a critical mass of farmers, and hence to improve people's livelihoods in
socio-economic terms and to protect the environment.
Valuable lessons learned of the
project will feed into a global dialogue on influencing and implementing
water policies for agriculture.
Under the project, 50,000 of the
poorer and marginalised coffee farming households with limited access to
know-how in the stakeholder provinces will receive training on Good
Agricultural Practices including water management.
As planned, 30 trainers and 2,000
coffee farmers will receive training and six demonstration models established
right this year gearing towards coffee sustainable production through the
application of effective water resource management models in each locality in
the project site.
Do Thanh Chung, country director
(Vietnam) of EDE Consulting said, “Through Nestlé funding and the experiences
from our ongoing NESCAFE Plan on coffee sustainable development, we expect to
lend a helping hand to raise the general awareness about how to reach optimal
water resource usage in coffee production in Vietnam as well as the possible
impacts on water sources quality improvement.”
The project success is expected to
contribute to boosting the coffee yields and minimising the environmental
impact and the quantity of water needed for production. Notably, the project
could help coffee farmers reduce the water they use from 700 litres to 400
litres per tree.
By Anh Duc, VIR
|
Thứ Bảy, 27 tháng 6, 2015
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