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Publication Details

Book Chapter
BC00465-18
TitleDeveloping participatory agro-climate advisories for integrated and agroforestry systems
AuthorElisabeth Simelton, Tam Thi Le, Miguel Coulier, Tuan Minh Duong and Hoa Dinh Le
EditorsRachmat Mulia and Elisabeth Simelton
Year2018
Book TitleTowards low-emissions landscapes in Viet Nam
Pages129-144
Call NumberBC00465-18
Abstract:
Southeast Asian farmers face numerous slow and fast-onset natural hazards that have negative impacts on their livelihoods, and consequently risk slowing their ability to adapt to changing climate patterns. Meanwhile they are also tasked to implement farming practices that help mitigating climate change. One key activity could help farmers’ decisions in addressing both challenges: better tailored seasonal weather forecasts combined with participatory development of climate-smart agricultural advice.
The Agro-Climate Information Services for Women and Ethnic Minority Farmers in Southeast Asia project (ACIS) addresses farmers’ demand for more actionable climate services in Viet Nam, Lao PDR and Cambodia. Although generally perceived as climate-smart practices, integrated and agroforestry systems are rare in advisories, nor as a strategy to adapt to natural disasters and climate variability. To address this gap, we demonstrate how farmers are involved in co-producing such information, using the example of My Loi, a ‘climatesmart village’ in Northcentral Viet Nam. The documentation consists of logbooks and notes from three participatory scenario planning meetings, the development of advisories, and in-depth interviews conducted between 2016 and 2018. In short, the timing and content of forecasts and advisories need to be decided with farmers. Regularly updated forecasts over various periods were important for agroforestry systems. Farmers needed information about limiting weather conditions, not the average. When forecasts were uncertain, diversification of species often also meant diversification of risk. Social learning helped farmers observe and document recommendations to build checklists for how to combine trees and crops to minimize negative weather-related impacts.
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