Abstract

Overwhelming scientific evidence shows agriculture is heavily impacted by negative climate change effects. While agriculture is affected, the sector is also the second-largest contributor to climate change, creating challenges in adaptation and mitigation strategies. Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) is a holistic approach to managing landscapes, utilized to guide farmers in the context of a changing climate. CSA is an attractive option for Vietnam, an agricultural country extremely vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Farmers and communities in Vietnam are facing significant risks. Changes in farming conditions, climate, and productivity threaten agriculture and livelihoods. The aim of the current study was to assess the effects of climate change on the people and agricultural systems in Thuong Bang La (TBL) commune, Vietnam, utilizing climate-smart agriculture rapid appraisal (CSA-RA) tools. The results indicated that agricultural production has been negatively impacted, with erratic and varied weather patterns causing outbreaks of disease, and reductions in the yield and productivity of livestock and cropping systems. Disasters including flooding, storms, and droughts are a prominent threat, leaving farmers unsure of how to cope. Through a showcase of CSA technologies, farmers were able to highlight their preferences for practices including mulching, drip irrigation and conservation agriculture in orange groves, bio-fertilizers and integrated pest management (IPM) in rice production, and using biological bedding in chicken raising. The study showed immediate openings to initiate context-specific CSA interventions and building the resilience of the agricultural systems in the development of one of the first climate-smart communes in Vietnam.

Highlights

  • The intimate link between agriculture and climate change is indisputable

  • The aim of the current study was to assess the effects of climate change on the people and agricultural systems in Thuong Bang La (TBL) commune, Vietnam, utilizing climatesmart agriculture rapid appraisal (CSA-RA) tools

  • The results showed that the TBL community has witnessed and experienced changing, erratic weather patterns, which they associate with climate change

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Summary

Introduction

The intimate link between agriculture and climate change is indisputable. the impacts will vary across regions and by crop, issues including elevated CO2 concentrations, sea-level rise, and variations in temperature and precipitation have far-reaching implications for the agricultural sector. Vietnam has experienced an increase in the frequency and intensity of events and disasters such as floods, droughts, landslides, and saltwater intrusion These events put pressure on the agricultural system, which currently facilitates the employment of 54% of the working population, with both men and women being involved (Tran, 2016; Irish Aid, 2017; Nguyen et al, 2017; Tran et al, 2017). It is the rural and agricultural communities of Vietnam that are facing some of the hardest challenges in the context of a changing climate.

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