Showing posts with label Organic farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organic farming. Show all posts

Thursday, June 07, 2012

CEDAC profession​al training in organic farming business is available for young graduates

Dear All,

Of your publication and broadcast interest!

In order to provide the opportunity for youth to take up a career in organic farming business and rural development,CEDAC organizes professional training in organic farm business management. The action learning oriented training program lasts six months. At the end of the training, the youth are supported to start their own farm business as well asto work with other farmers to improve their farming businesses. From 2012 to2022, CEDAC plans to provide an opportunity for up to 1000 young graduates to participate in the training program. In 2012, 17 fresh graduates are participating in the program, and six of them have already started their own farm business. There are already more young people registered for the next course, which will start in July 2012.

The training course is open for all interested young graduates. Scholarships are available during the six month course. After the training course, the trainees will also receive support in terms of capital investment, technical assistance, management and marketing support from CEDAC.

It is important to note that since 1998,CEDAC has organized training for 22 generations of young graduates. In the past training has specialized in how to be a development professional. However from 2012 onwards the course will focus more on how to be professionals in organic farm business.

For more details, please refer to attached file in Khmer.

Thank you and best regards,

Him Khortieth
......................
Communication Officer
Centre d'Etude et de Développement
Agricole Cambodgien (CEDAC)
No. 119,Street 257, Sangkat Toek Laak 1,
Khan Toul Kork
B.P. 1118 Phnom Penh
H/P:855-16-57-57-13
Tel : 855- 23-880-916
Fax :855-23-885-146
E-mail:himkhortieth@cedac.org.kh
www.cedac.org.kh

Friday, March 30, 2012

CEDAC to train 1000 young people on Farm Business Management

Dear Press,

CEDAC is providing scholarship to interested young people who want to have career inorganic farm business management to participate in its six months training program.

CEDAC’s President, Dr. Yang Saing Koma said that CEDAC plans to expand this program to reach 1000 other rural youths in the next ten years.

For more details, please refer to the attached news article in Khmer.

Thanks and best regards,

Him Khortieth
--
Communication Officer
Cambodian Centerfor Study and Development in Agriculture (CEDAC)
#119, St 257, Teuk Laak1, Tuol Kork, PhnomPenh
H/P :(855) 16 57 57 13
(855) 97 7340073
Tel : (855) 23 88 09 16
Fax : (855) 23 88 51 46
E-mail :himkhortieth@cedac.org.kh
Website: www.cedac.org.kh

 

Friday, August 27, 2010

Cambodians see growth in organic vegetables

August 26, 2010
By Phat Samphy, Kandal Stueng
UCANews.com


A project to encourage villagers to grow their own organic food supply and increase their family income, has been a huge success, Caritas Cambodia says.

“Global warming is causing problems in agricultural production in many areas … Planting vegetables in their gardens provides food security,” said Chai Meng, Caritas’ community empowerment program manager in Kandal province.

The social service arm of the local Catholic Church launched its Home Vegetable Garden project at the start of this year in Kandal Stueng, south of the capital.

So far 19 families are involved in the program, in which Caritas provides technical and financial support, Meng said. Each family’s vegetable plot can measure up to 100 square meters, depending on the amount of land they have. “Many kinds of vegetables such as wax melon, long beans and cabbage are being grown,” Meng said.

Not only can they eat what they grow, they are boosting their income by selling the produce as well, he said. “Their produce is sold in villages and some markets in Phnom Penh and many people are buying them.”

Caritas advises on the proper seeds to use and provides each family with US$25 – US$50 with which to start their vegetable garden.

“We encourage the use of organic fertilizers like compost and natural insecticides,” said Chab Rosekdey, a Caritas official.

“My family’s living standards have improved so much. We have organic vegetables to eat, which do not damage our health,” said Klot Sareth, a 35-year-old villager.

The program has also seen a fewer people migrating to Phnom Penh to look for work, which reduces the risk of human trafficking, Meng said.

Caritas is now planning to help villagers expand the production of organic vegetables on a more commercial scale, he said.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

More Cambodian farmers shift toward organic crops

PHNOM PENH, Mar. 3, 2010 (Xinhua) -- The number of organic farmers producing crops in Cambodia is growing thanks to efforts aimed at training agricultural workers in organic farming techniques, local media reported on Wednesday, citing the Cambodian Center for Study and Development in Agriculture (CEDAC).

Marking the first organized meeting for organic farmers, CEDAC president Yaing Saing Koma was quoted by The Cambodia Daily as saying that the number of organic farmers registered with his organization reached 61 in 2009, up from just five in 2004 when CEDAC started to train farmers in the use of natural fertilizers.

"It is not easy to grow organic vegetables as we must be careful about the health of consumers," he said, making reference to the heightened risk of disease from insects in crops grown without the use of chemicals. "We don't use chemical substances to grow vegetables, only natural fertilizers."

Organic produce amounted to just 30 tons in 2009, according to CEDAC, which helps farmers earn a fair price for their produce at five shops in Phnom Penh and another located in Preah Sihanouk city.

In a statement released on Tuesday, CEDAC said that organic produce sells for an average of 15 to 25 percent more than non-organic vegetables sold in local markets.

The German development service, or DED, has been assisting CEDAC in their quest to link organic farmers to the domestic markets.

Anna Meusinger, a junior adviser to CEDAC working with DED, said despite recent progress a lack of irrigation systems was limiting the growth rate of organic farmers.

Monday, September 03, 2007

Cambodia's organic farming efforts bear fruit

Mon Sep 3, 2007
By Lach Chantha

TAKEO, Cambodia (Reuters Life!) - More Cambodian farmers are turning back the clock and using natural fertilizers as a drive to reintroduce organic farming bears fruit.

Khim Siphay is producing a lot more rice and vegetables on his farm these days and he pays very little for the fertilizers or pesticides he relies on.

"Using pesticide or fertilizers kills important insects and causes the soil to become polluted," the 46-year-old farmer said.

"I use compost and it helps keep the soil good from one year to another. All of my family members help make the compost."

Three-quarters of Cambodia's 13 million population depends on agriculture in a country where the average daily income is less than $2 making cost-efficient, and healthier, organic farming attractive.

The shift is part of a project started by a non-governmental organization, Centre d'Etude et de Developpement Agricole Cambogien (CEDAC) to wean farmers off harmful and expensive chemicals.

When the project was launched in 2000, there were only 28 farmers willing to go back to the old-fashioned way. Now, there are around 60,000 throughout the country and the farming method is endorsed by Cambodia's Ministry of Agriculture.

Rice yields per hectare for farmers who have gone organic have almost doubled and seed requirements have fallen by 70 to 80 percent, according to CEDAC. This means an income rise per hectare to $172 from $58, as organic rice is sold at a premium.

"The important point of organic farming is that farmers don't need to spend money on fertilizers and pesticide so they spend less money on farming," said CEDAC official Yang Saing Koma.

"They can sell the produce for a higher price. Also they can avoid being infected by pesticides and they will be healthier. It is also good for the environment," he said.

Organic farming is not just restricted to rice paddies. The farmers are encouraged to channel rain water for irrigation, creating more ponds and canals which can be used to breed fish.

Rice and other produce can be used to feed chickens to produce organic poultry and eggs.

"I started doing organic farming outside my rice paddy, but then I noticed production was double, so in the next season, I decided to grow organically on all of my land," said farmer Ros Meo. "I spend less money now and I can grow more and I am not sick as I was before, my health is now good."

As Cambodia slowly leaves its war-scarred past behind and people, especially in the cities, have more cash to spare, interest is growing in healthier living, giving a further boost to organic farming.

The government is also hoping the country will eventually secure a footing in the health-conscious international market for organic food.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Poor Cambodians make big gains with organic farming

Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Don Cayo
Vancouver Sun (BC, Canada)


PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - The story of leap-frog technology is a common one throughout the developing world.

Scores of societies are rocketing from isolation -- from conditions, especially in rural areas, that were little better than feudal Europe -- straight into the information age. They're skipping right over the half-century or more of ubiquitous land lines -- which changed our lives in rich countries -- and embracing cellphones and even wireless computer networks.

But a sizable number of small-scale farmers in the Kingdom of Cambodia are not leaping into today's chemically dependent monocultures. Rather, they're using intelligent low-tech to take them straight to what many believe should become the norm of the future -- modern, high-yield, organic farming.

About 50,000 farm families in 15 of Cambodia's 20 provinces are learning to double and triple their yields and diversify their harvests without the high-cost, high-risk chemical and mechanical inputs found on most modern farms almost everywhere else.

The 10-year-old project is the brainchild of Prak Sereyvath, a 35-year-old agrologist and the managing director of CEDAC (Centre d'Etude et de Developpement Agricole Cambogien).

Ironically, CEDAC's success is possible thanks in part to Cambodia's tragic recent past -- an internal five-year genocide that began, after five years of fighting, in 1975 under Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, and was followed by an invasion from neighbouring Vietnam and still more civil war.

These terrible times, Prak says, destroyed the agricultural infrastructure of the country. And they caused it to miss out on the fruits of Asia's Green Revolution which, beginning in the 1960s, provided the essential under-pinning for the spectacular economic performance of so many other southeast Asian countries.

Thus, Prak was able to begin his work with a more or less clean slate when he helped to found CEDAC in 1997, just four years after the country's return to a semblance of normalcy and two years before the first full year of peace in almost three decades.

CEDAC started out in just three villages. Today, it spends $1 million US a year to work in 1,500 rural locations, thanks to grants from a dozen countries. (CIDA, Canada's federal aid agency, is involved in only one of its hundreds of projects.)

It teaches a wide range of organic techniques as well as farm organization and marketing. A key tool is a huge assortment of simple, well-illustrated publications in the Khmer language. They include a highly subsidized monthly magazine that sells for less than three cents a copy.

Cambodia officially boasts an 85-per-cent literacy rate, but Prak estimates that half of CEDAC's farmers can't read even a simple document. Some get their children to read to them, others get the information from literate neighbours.

The productivity gains of modern organic farming are dramatic and hugely important to profoundly poor peasants who previously saw little or no cash income. But Prak concedes they can't match the gains for farmers who turn to chemical fertilizer and pesticides.

But there are other advantages. For example: "It is much better for human health and the environment."

It's also much cheaper. There are no expensive inputs, and some techniques -- like spacing rice plants farther apart so each one fills out better -- increases the yield while requiring fewer seedlings and less work.

And organic farming fosters diversification, avoiding the all-eggs-in-one-basket trap of modern monocultures.

"A Khmer proverb says where there is water there are fish," Prak said. "Because of chemicals and pollution, that has become much less true. We make it more true again."

Organic rice production allows the reintroduction of both fish and frogs -- important protein sources as well as cash generators -- to paddies where fish and amphibians would die if chemical fertilizer and pesticides were used.

To date, the market for these organic products is entirely internal, and they command only a tiny premium. But, given rich consumers' appetite for organics, that could change.

This nation where, a few short years ago, people used to starve, is now producing a surplus. Rice has grown to become its fourth-biggest export behind only mass-produced clothing, timber and plantation-grown rubber.

And there's potential for a lot more organic rice. Cambodians are starting to move to the cities, thanks in part to new jobs in textile plants. But 78 per cent -- down from 80 per cent -- of the 14 million citizens still depend on farming. So as more and more learn to double or triple their harvests, the export potential becomes huge.

dcayo@png.canwest.com
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Don Cayo is in Cambodia as the volunteer project leader for "Seeing the World through New Eyes", a short-term fellowship program that sends new or beginning B.C. journalists to report from developing countries. It is funded by CIDA and administered by the Jack Webster Foundation.