Vietnam farmers get aid for sustainable growth

Coping with climate change impacts

1102
Vietnam
Agriculture in Vietnam has been characterized by the unsustainable exploitation of natural resources.

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the UN’s rural development agency, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam have signed a loan agreement to promote inclusive and sustainable agricultural growth in the Mekong Delta.

The Climate-smart Agricultural Value Chain Development (CSAT) project will generate sustainable income opportunities and improve rural livelihoods for 60,000 families engaged in small-scale farming.

Though Vietnam has made impressive progress in reducing poverty over the last 30 years, the average income per capita in rural areas is less than half that in urban areas. While agriculture, which employs 37% of the population, has contributed greatly to economic growth, it has been characterized by the unsustainable exploitation of natural resources. In the Mekong Delta, the overuse of surface and groundwater is leading to water scarcity. Climate change effects such as rising sea levels, droughts, and increasing temperatures have taken their toll on agriculture as well. As a result, this region is the only one in Vietnam where poverty increased between 2015 and 2019.

Vietnam’s small-scale farmers, particularly in the Mekong Delta, face multiple challenges, including volatile food and fuel prices and the effects of climate change,” said Ambrosio Barros, IFAD Country director, Vietnam. “Our goal is to enable small-scale farmers, and especially rural women and youth, to move from subsistence farming to climate-resilient, market-oriented agriculture, enabling them to earn increased, sustainable incomes,” he added.

Rural households in the Mekong Delta have limited access to water infrastructure, insurance, and climate-sensitive agro-advisory services to mitigate risks – a critical gap in a low-lying river delta identified as one of the most vulnerable to climate change, notably in terms of sea level rise, droughts, extreme heat, and severe storms.

CSAT will invest in the climate-resilient infrastructure needed to develop inclusive and sustainable value chains. It will support better access to financial and extension services and encourage small-scale farmers to adopt environmentally sustainable and climate-resilient technologies, including efficient water usage. CSAT will also work to integrate climate resilience more strongly in provincial and regional planning.

IFAD is providing a US $43 million loan towards the total project cost ($136.4 million) over 5 years. In addition, the Dutch Fund for Climate and Development is providing $40.01 million, and the national government is providing $17.87 million, with $4.6 million contributed in kind by project participants. Additional private sector financing will be available for producer groups and investments in small and medium enterprises and value chain development.

In Vietnam, IFAD has supported 17 projects directly benefiting 738,470 households, at a cost of US$788.10 million with an IFAD loan of US$463.49 million. It focuses on activities that have the greatest impact on residual poverty in rural areas, developing market-led innovations that aid poor people.

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An English-language food and beverage processing and packaging industry B2B platform in print and web, IndiFoodBev is in its third year of publication. It is said that the Indian food and beverage industries represent approximately US$ 900 billion in revenues which implies more than 20% of the country’s GDP. Eliminating the wastage on the farmside can help to deliver more protein to a higher number of the population apart from generating sizable exports. The savings in soil, seeds, water, fertilizer, energy and ultimately food and nutrition could be the most immense contribution that country is poised to make to the moderation of climate change.

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Naresh Khanna – 10 February 2025

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