Poverty alleviation is strongly dependent on soil and natural resources access and preservation. Swidden cultivation is one of the best examples of farmer ecological strategy: with a mosaic of sites under fallow and some in cropping, soil potential is maintained and biodiversity (source of gathering and hunting, medicinal plants, firewood) is optimised by smallholders.
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However, over the past fifteen years, farming systems have changed drastically in the Lao PDR, with swidden systems giving way to more modern agricultural technologies in many areas. In southern Xayabury (Mekong corridor), with agricultural intensification, rotational cultivation systems and fallow periods are disappearing, being progressively replaced by a ‘resource-mining’ agriculture that has serious social and environmental costs, including increased soil erosion (leading to destruction of roads and paddy fields), loss of soil fertility, and chemical pollution of the environment. In the uplands, intensification of swidden cultivation, with longer periods of cropping and more frequent return to a given field, is now being questioned as it seem unable to face the main challenges of food safety, soil and water conservation and environmental protection. In many countries, including the Lao P.D.R, the rationale of slash-and-burn collapses under changes in social conditions (increasing population density), modification of land access and increasing pressure on farming systems.
Knowledge of farming systems is key to rational generation of technologies. Our research priorities are based on agricultural aspects, socio-economic needs and environmental conditions of farmers. Initial assessment of the situation has been carried-out at different levels in order to integrate all aspects of smallholders’ strategies and environmental conditions.
Since the 1990s, traditional farming systems in southern Xayabury province have changed drastically through extensive agricultural development based on cash crops such as maize, rice-bean (Vigna umbellata), peanuts, Job’s tears (Coix lacryma Jobi), sesame and black cowpea (Vigna unguiculata). This development is mainly the result of technology transfer from Thailand (inputs, heavy mechanisation and technical skills), along with increased local financial capacity and market accessibility. In response to Thai market demand and due to the low labour requirements of the crop, maize monocropping now dominates production in the area. Land preparation, based on ploughing steep slopes, has allowed maize cultivation across large upland fields. This development, along with land allocation and increasing population density, is leading to dwindling fallow periods. Despite very good soils and high potential for agricultural development, arable land can be quickly degraded, in which case negative social and economic ...
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A survey of 73 households conducted in three districts of Xieng Khouang Province, Lao PDR, revealed that rice importance still prevails in remote areas with limited access. Farming systems in such areas are still based on food security and self-sufficiency, and rice crops remain the cornerstone of household production strategies. However, the emergence of new economic opportunities such as (i) better road access to markets and, (ii) increasing local and regional urban consumption, have also slightly modified these traditional schemes and encouraged the emergence of non-rice based farming systems in the province. Read more: Diagnostic agro socio-économique (document in french); Initial diagnosis for Xieng Khouang province (pwt); Impact of urban development and market access on farming systems (poster);