Climate-smart incentives
To
overcome the issues of drought and extreme poverty in Zambia,
smallholders are being rewarded for taking up climate-smart,
conservation practices to increase productivity and protect their
environment.
Smallholders in Zambia are receiving
training in climate-smart production practices and technologies to achieve food
security and access to guaranteed markets, while conserving natural resources. Through
a Community Markets for Conservation
(COMACO) model for rural development, 179,000 farmers across eastern Zambia
– 52% of whom are women – have benefited from access to affordable farming
inputs and formal training in low-tillage farming, mulching and composting.
COMACO’s premise is that with the right training
and incentives, smallholders will favour sustainable agriculture practices over
more destructive methods, such as monoculture and deforestation, and move away
from elephant and rhino poaching. The scheme offers above-market prices for
goods that are produced in compliance with conservation agriculture practices,
and access to inputs when using these methods.
Before the programme was introduced in 2003,
farmers in the area were earning around €17 per harvest;
this has since risen by at least €170. “Most families in the Luangwa Valley
experience 3-5 months of chronic food insecurity. With few options available to
support their families, residents may turn to logging, illegal hunting, and
slash-and-burn agriculture. But, since these incentives were introduced to the
area, these trends have reduced and farmers involved in the programme have
enough food,” says chief Nsefu, a traditional leader in the area.
The promoted practices also include beekeeping,
gardening in the dry season and poultry husbandry. Diversified production has
enhanced productivity for smallholders and reduced the need for inorganic
fertilisers, thereby decreasing nitrous oxide emissions. “Teaching how to
compost may not be appreciated [by farmers] the first time but, as time has
gone by, we have come to value the training. Our soils are looking healthier
and even the crop yield has improved. We have enough food in our homes and
income in our pockets,” says Zitandala Sakala, a smallholder farmer in Luangwa
Valley in eastern Zambia.
The uptake of beekeeping has also dissuaded farmers from cutting
down their trees. “It has been hard work, but now, hundreds of farmers are
realising the value of keeping and protecting trees. I have felt such pride in
the producers for the way they have changed their practices and it makes me so
happy to see them make a better living from conservation,” says Julius Kamanga,
a beekeeper from Mfuwe.
Mulching has also become an integral practice among farmers in the area
as a result of the project training. Smallholder Nelly Zimba feels the
technique is a necessary ingredient to successful farming and provides the key
to long-term maintenance of strong, biologically active soils. “If you see my
field today, it is full of maize stalks; I have reserved this for mulching at
an opportune time,” she says. “We raise over 35 different types of fruits and
vegetables with about 2 ha under production. We have 4 ha suitable for
vegetable production, so we rotate the other 2 with cover crops.”
Zambia
faces frequent flooding and drought, and Luangwa Valley is one of the most
affected areas in the country. To help mitigate the impacts of drought, the
programme has facilitated the planting of over 10 million cassava cuttings to
serve as a drought-resistant food reserve. Cassava crops can also help increase
water storage in the soil profile and reduce the risk of rainfall run-off.
“[The farmers] have learned the importance of diversification and now grow
cassava. Before COMACO, a lot of farmers just grew maize and the yields have
always been depressing,” says Nsefu. PUBLISHED IN THE SPORE MAGAZINE ON APRIL 3, 2019. LINK: https://spore.cta.int/en/climate-smart-solutions/all/article/reaping-the-economic-rewards-of-conservation-sid029ad9381-f845-4332-be5e-8ab35a406afb
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