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Section 1: Production of food


Land and water management

Two of the most important agricultural resources, land and water are crucial for the well being of the Asia-Pacific region, which is home to nearly three - fourths of the world’s agricultural population. However, Asia-Pacific tillers have to depend on about 28 percent of the world’s cropland with the land available per person for cultivation being just one-sixth of the average for the rest of the world.

A growing population is adding to pressure on arable land. To meet its increasing food needs, the region will have to produce more food largely from the existing farmlands because there is very little land available for physical expansion. This can be done only by increasing crop yields and stepping up cropping intensity.

While new farm technologies can bring about dramatic gains in crop yields, much depends on the state of land and water resources. A major problem is land degradation, which is largely caused in the region by water and wind erosion. A joint study by FAO, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) of land degradation in South Asia found that water and wind erosion respectively damage 25 and 18 percent of the sub - region’s total land. Latest estimates show that in China, water erosion affects 34 percent of the total cultivated land and wind erosion a further two percent. In Thailand, approximately 34 percent of the total land area is affected by water erosion.

Deforestation, excessive use of chemical fertilizers, soil erosion and excessive extraction of ground water are major causes of land degradation in the region.

With more than half the world’s 30 largest cities located in the region, rapid industrialization and urbanization are also responsible for swallowing up and affecting arable land.

Asia-Pacific farms account for more than half of the world’s agricultural water use with 60 percent of the world’s water being consumed in the region in the year 2000. The region has some of the wettest and driest spots on earth. The average annual per capita water availability of about 3 800 cubic metres - slightly more than half the global average - varies from about 1 500 cubic metres in the Indian subcontinent to over 9 000 cubic metres in Southeast Asia and nearly 16 000 cubic metres in the island nations.

Moreover, a large part of the region’s water comes from the annual monsoon rains, with almost 80 percent of the water flow in the big rivers of South Asia and China confined to a few months of the year.

Irrigation systems are not only costly, but also inefficient. It is estimated that up to 60 percent of the water diverted or pumped for irrigation is not used for plant production. The region must give priority attention to modernizing water delivery and irrigation systems.

Countries in the region need conservation techniques to cope with land degradation. Integrated watershed management is one of the best ways of developing rainfed areas. This has conservation and development aspects, arresting and reversing land and ecological degradation while producing material benefits to local communities in the form of food, fodder, forest and livestock products.

Appropriate technologies should also be adopted to reduce and prevent soil erosion, which is a serious problem in hilly areas. These include correct tillage practices, land formation techniques and stabilization structures. The Integrated Plant Nutrition System (IPNS) to increase soil fertility can also help in reducing soil erosion. n Investment in land and water.

Investment in land and water

Publication RAP 2002/09 explains the urgent need for arresting and reversing the decline in investment in land and water development in Asia-Pacific countries. Irrigation needs about one - third of the US$30.7 billion additional annual investment required in agriculture in developing countries to ensure food security.

A meeting in October 2001 at the FAO regional office in Bangkok brought together high level government officials from 12 countries (Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, DPR Korea, India, Indonesia, Laos, Pakistan, Republic of Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Viet Nam), along with observers representing the Asian Development Bank, the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and the Mekong River Commission. It was one of similar regional consultations organized by FAO across the world in preparation for the June 2002 World Food Summit: five years later.

A Bangkok Declaration issued by the consultation, expressed concern over the declining quality and availability of land and water in the region, which together with the serious decline in national and donor support, is a major obstacle to reducing hunger and poverty in Asia and the Pacific. Appealing to national government leaders to show the political will and investment commitment, the declaration urges Asia-Pacific governments to involve both public and private sector, and people’s participation in the sustainable development and use of land and water resources to bring about an ‘evergreen revolution’.

FAO has developed training programmes and materials for modernizing irrigation, water harvesting and water conservation. Training workshops have been conducted on service orientation for irrigation agencies in Thailand, irrigation modernization in Indonesia and Viet Nam, and roving seminars on water harvesting in China, Laos, Mongolia, Myanmar and Viet Nam.

FAO organized an international e - mail conference on irrigation management transfer, modalities for cost recovery and pricing of irrigation services. Technical assistance was provided to Cambodia and Thailand on participatory irrigation management covering, among other issues, user contributions to the provision of irrigation services, monitoring and evaluation for policy implementation and development of training material.

FAO collaborated with the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) on a pilot project to develop a ‘water vision’ for countries in Southeast Asia (see section 3).

Plant production and protection

Fertile land and favourable weather conditions make the Asia-Pacific region a major producer of cereals (rice, wheat and maize), legumes, vegetables, fruits and industrial crops like rubber, coconut, pepper and oil palm. The region produces 90 percent of the world’s rice, which is Asia’s most important food crop and the staple diet for three - fifth of the global population. Rice provides more than half the daily dietary energy of over three billion people in the region.

A number of Asian countries are now self - sufficient in rice production with the current annual harvest of 524 million tonnes expected to grow to 700 million tonnes by the year 2025. However, the region is adding 51 million rice eaters to its population annually even as less and less land and water are available for rice farms with more and more Asia-Pacific peasants depending on degraded farmlands.

The key to future food security in Asia lies in boosting farm yields without damaging the natural resource base, reducing the rate of population increase and diversifying the food basket. FAO is helping increase rice output in those Asian countries where paddy yields are lower compared to the region’s efficient rice - farming nations.

The world food and agriculture agency is also encouraging Asian rice farmers to combine their harvests with new crop types, including hitherto neglected species, vegetables, fruits, herbs and spices, medicinal plants and cash crops. Crop and farming system diversification, by including livestock farming as well as others, will not only increase food variety, but would help reduce the environmental, economic and nutritional risks associated with planting only one type of crop.

Expanding rice production has, moreover, reduced profits from paddy farming. FAO advocates farming diversification by rearing livestock, planting higher value horticultural and cash crops and marketing value - added products of all commodities as the best protection against falling farm produce prices. In Asia and the Pacific, higher value crops produce ten to 15 times the net returns per hectare of rice. The region produces over 50 percent of the world’s industrial crops mainly through smallholders. Industrial crops cover about 20 percent of available lands in Asia and the Pacific.

Effective plant quarantine measures keeps farm pests and diseases from spreading. Developing countries in the region have to conform to new international plant quarantine standards being developed under the new world trade rules. While protecting farm harvests from pests and crop diseases, it is important to ensure that the methods used do not cause irreparable damage to the agrarian ecology and human health. The international code of conduct for pesticide management, revised in 2001, requires countries to stop subsidising pesticide use. FAO is promoting integrated pest management (IPM) techniques to eliminate the use of expensive chemical pest killers that are known to be harmful for farms and consumers. It is also encouraging organic farming such as organic coffee, pepper, vegetables and fruits.

A sustainable strategy was formulated to make Asia’s rice - centred farmlands yield more food, incomes and livelihoods for the region. Publication RAP 2002/12 examines the potential of the wide range of rice - based farming systems in the region to meet the food and livelihood security demands that will be made on them in the coming decades. It outlines a menu of inter - disciplinary strategies and interventions to enable the rice - based systems to live up to the challenge and the role that FAO can play in this. “A system that is so large and so pro - poor as the rice system has a major potential to impact - favourably or adversely - on the world’s food security and on its politico - economic stability,” note the authors.

The FAO regional office organized expert consultations and issued publications on crop diversification (RAP 2001/03), tropical fruits such as grapes (RAP2001/07), lychee (RAP 2001/09, RAP 2002/04 and RAP 2002/16), and on under - utilized tropical fruits in Thailand (RAP 2001/26).

The first Asian round table on sustainable and speciality coffee production, processing and marketing was held in Chiang Mai in February 2001 with participation from East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Viet Nam.

FAO worked with countries in the region for the development of international standards for plant quarantine in keeping with the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreement on the application of sanitary and phytosanitary measures. The aim is to prevent the use of unjustifiable phytosanitary measures as barriers to international trade. In this connection, working groups of the Asia-Pacific Plant Protection Commission (APPPC) met at the FAO regional office in Bangkok in July 2001 and June 2002, and the 22nd session of APPPC was held in Ho Chi Minh City in September 2001 with delegates representing Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, DPR Korea, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, New Zealand, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Republic of Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Tonga and Viet Nam (see also RAP publication 2001/24).

Key experts from China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Philippines and Thailand - together with resource persons from CAB International (SEARC) and FAO - examined and recommended ways of improving the current state of plant pest management education in countries in the region and set up an Asia-Pacific working group on plant pest management curriculum development to follow up on these. The proceedings of the consultation are documented in publication RAP 2001/01 Curriculum development for plant pest management in Asia-Pacific.


Animal production and health

Millions of rural households in Asia-Pacific countries depend on domesticated animals for food, farm power and income. The region has 30 percent of the world’s livestock species. Though livestock food products are still not a significant part of the diet in developing Asia-Pacific countries, consumption is growing rapidly.

Developing Asian countries now have the world’s highest growth rates of production and consumption of food derived from livestock. Meat production in the region grew from about nine million tonnes in 1961 to more than 90 million tonnes by the end of the 20th century. Small farmers account for the bulk of the region’s livestock production, combining this with cropping and other agricultural activities.

Income from the sale of milk, meat, manure and other basic livestock products has traditionally protected small farmers from the shock of crop failure and provided steady livelihood to peasants who do not have other agricultural resources. Ownership of livestock also helps keep hunger away from the poor person’s door. Possession of livestock, which feed on open grazing lands, allows the rural poor to take advantage of common property resources to earn income.

Livestock also provide a large part of power on Asia-Pacific farms. According to one estimate in 1985, the 30 million draught animals used then on Asia’s small farms did work equivalent to the same number of tractors.

The big growth in the region’s poultry and pig meat industries - the latter accounted for 55 percent of all meat production in 2000 - is promoting a shift from pasture - based production systems to feed cropping. Some countries have to depend on feed imports to meet the livestock industry needs.

Prevention, control and eradication of communicable livestock diseases are central to FAO’s livestock development priorities. Some animal diseases can also be transmitted to humans such as the Nipah virus, which devastated Malaysia’s pig industry and claimed more than 100 human lives in 1998 - 99. A number of emerging diseases with the potential to infect humans have been identified in the region in the past ten years.

Over the past quarter of a century, developing Asian countries have introduced several exotic livestock species in a bid to increase productivity. However, most such introductions - usually through crossbreeding - have not been successful. The reasons for this range from increased feed consumption, lower reproductive rates and greater disease susceptibility of the new breeds, to indebtedness for local farmers who found themselves unable to repay loans taken to procure the exotic species.

Livestock development in the region is also threatened by the disappearance of indigenous breeds. Every week, the world loses two breeds of domestic animals, according to a joint study by FAO and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP). The Asia-Pacific region is home to 99.6 percent of the world’s buffalo breeds, 56.3 percent of pig, 62.7 percent of goat, 46.4 percent of chicken and 85.3 percent of duck breeds. Among the livestock species at risk of extinction is the H’Mong cattle of Viet Nam, which currently number 14 000.

The coming years are a critical period for livestock production in Asia and the Pacific. Poorly planned animal breeding strategies and the loss of indigenous breeds threaten the region’s ability to meet future food and livelihood demands. At the same time, the growing demand for livestock products now offers the opportunity to launch a new food revolution to reduce poverty and hunger among small farming households who form 80 percent of all farmer families in Asia and the Pacific.

FAO supports the Animal Production and Health Commission for Asia and the Pacific (APHCA) - see the Internet web site http://www.aphca.org - and the South Asia Rinderpest Campaign.

The diverse functions of livestock are examined in detail in a publication - RAP 2002/06 Some issues associated with the livestock industries of the Asia-Pacific region - produced jointly with APHCA. The study reveals the remarkable growth in the consumption of livestock products in the region in the past four decades as well as the striking diversity in its nature: pig meat is China’s main livestock product while South Asia’s is milk. However, with the exception of Malaysia and Mongolia, there is still a big gulf between the livestock based protein intake of the high - income countries - Australia, Japan and New Zealand - and the region’s developing nations. Livestock products have traditionally provided more than half the protein intake of Mongolia’s people, while livestock protein consumption almost doubled in Malaysia since the mid - 1970s. The publication also examines issues surrounding the growth of Asia’s modern livestock industry.

Other recent APHCA publications issued by the FAO regional office are RAP 2001/25 Report of the 25th session of APHCA held in the Philippines in September 2001, and RAP 2002/01 Manual on the diagnosis of Nipah virus infection in animals.

FAO’s Domestic Animal Diversity Information System (DAD - IS) assists in the conservation and promotion of animal genetic diversity. The regional State of the World Animal Genetic Resources is under preparation. The regional office also publishes the quarterly Asian Livestock on the Internet.

A consultation, jointly organised by FAO and the International Feed Industry Federation in Bangkok in April 2002, discussed changes in livestock systems; enhanced requirements for protein in the tropics and the potential of ruminants on limited protein intake to utilize available forage; food safety issues related to animal feeds derived from biotechnology crops, including genetically - modified organisms (GMOs); current issues relating to the use of animal by - products in feeds; adaptation of European laws and regulations on animal feed use, to conditions in developing countries and countries in transition. Presentations were made by animal production and health experts on developments and issues relating to livestock production, protein supplies and the feed industries of selected countries including Australia, Botswana, China, India, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Thailand, Turkey, Viet Nam and countries of the European Union.

FAO organized a number of meetings, training courses and workshops on various aspects of animal production and health. One of these was the Regional Workshop on Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) - better known as the ‘mad cow’ disease - in November 2001. The meeting was attended by over 250 participants from China, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand and Viet Nam.

Biogas digestion is a very efficient and cost - effective approach for treatment of abattoir wastes at the small - to medium - scale sector, where communities usually cannot afford mechanical treatment systems and prefer dumping the wastes into the environment. An FAO workshop in February 2001 disseminated this technology to 12 countries (Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Viet Nam).

A joint endeavour of FAO and a non - governmental organization, Humane Society International, offered guidance to the livestock slaughter industry on ensuring humane treatment of animals. The handbook RAP 2001/04 Guidelines for humane handling, transport and slaughter of livestock includes sections on animal stress and pain and the negative effects these have on meat quality. Highlighting prevalent faulty methods that are objectionable on both ethical and economic grounds, it recommends sizeable improvements in the equipment and facilities used in developing countries for livestock slaughter for meat. At the same time, determined efforts are needed to educate and train livestock slaughter industry personnel to avoid negligence and economic losses.

Fisheries

Fish and rice constitute the traditional diet of most Asian and Pacific people. Per caput fish consumption in the region ranges from the world’s highest level in the Maldives to among the lowest in Pakistan and parts of northern India. In the Pacific, subsistence fisheries make an important contribution to often high levels of per caput supplies in many of the developing countries of the small islands. Fish provides nutritious food, employment and income for millions of people. In 1998, capture fishery production from this region accounted for half of the world production, and the production from aquaculture reached 88 percent of the world aquaculture production of fish and shellfish.

The fishery sector thus plays a valuable role for food security in most countries of the region. However, in general, marine fishery resources are fully exploited (e.g. in the Gulf of Thailand, the Bay of Tonkin and the Bay of Bengal) and many heavily fished stocks will need to be rehabilitated. It is unlikely that future demands from an increased population in the region will be met from the seas. Aquaculture, and to a lesser extent inland fishery, may provide considerable opportunities for further development to increase fish production, but the region will probably need to rely more on imports of fishery products for its future supplies.

For many countries in the region, the central issue remains that of management and sustainability of the marine resources. Generally, coastal resources are severely overfished by an overcrowded small - scale fishery sector. There, catch rates, fish size and quality and, in some cases, fishers’ incomes, are declining. Conflicts between small - scale fisheries and trawlers in the coastal zones are frequent and fisheries management is complicated. A partnership between local communities and the central government is evolving to develop a community - based fisheries management system for local resources. The prime concern is the need to increase the supply of fish and the economic benefits from fishing by the introduction and enforcement of better management.

Aquaculture is an increasingly important supplier of food and sustainer of food security in many Asian countries. Here again, considerable benefits may be gained by the better integration of aquaculture into overall rural and agricultural developments. Supply of fish from aquaculture could also be further increased by wider application of technological advances and better fish health management. Diversification and genetic improvement of cultured species needs to be promoted, together with a wider application of semi - intensive production systems.

Governments and FAO are tackling the above issues by promoting appropriate policies and programmes. The implementation of the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries remains the primary goal for FAO in Asia-Pacific. The code aims to raise awareness from top officials to local fishers, creating a responsible fishery that stands on principles of protection for living aquatic resources, environment and coastal areas. A responsible fishery also aims to have all people involved develop fishery and aquaculture techniques and conservation, as well as to improve food security and food quality.

The 27th session of the Asia-Pacific Fisheries Commission (APFIC) was held in September 2001 in Manila. Representatives from Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, France, India, Indonesia, Japan, Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, New Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Viet Nam met with observers from intergovernmental and non - governmental organizations to discuss the recommendations of three expert groups set up by the 26th APFIC commission. As reported in publication RAP 2001/18, the session also deliberated on changes in APFIC’s future role in the light of suggestions given at the 68th Session of the APFIC Executive Committee.

Jointly organized with the Coastal Development Center (CDC) of Kasetsart University, a November 2001 meeting identified constraints and responsibilities in decentralized small - scale fisheries management and developed practical solutions to the social, economic, environmental and legal constraints to local fisheries management. Publication RAP 2002/10 Interactive mechanisms for small - scale fisheries management includes country papers which examine national experiences in small - scale fisheries management in Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Viet Nam. Intended to support the process of decentralizing small - scale fisheries management to prevent over - fishing and coastal degradation in many developing countries in the region, the document offers suggestions based on the experience of practitioners from various fields.

Based on information collected by two FAO - commissioned surveys during 2001, the publication RAP 2002/13 Pacific Island fisheries: regional and country information reviews the state of fisheries in the Pacific Islands, both on a regional basis as well as in each of the 14 independent countries (Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu). With exclusive economic zones (EEZs) spread across 30.5 million sq km - 60 times their total land area and 28 percent of the world’s EEZ area - Pacific Island states are vitally dependent on fisheries for their economic well being. The publication reviews the small - scale commercial and subsistence fisheries, which are crucial for the national economies, food security and rural livelihoods in the Pacific. A regional overview provides detailed information about fisheries in the sub - region as well as issues of coastal fisheries management. There are detailed country profiles with national fisheries data, an overview of marine and inland fisheries and aquaculture, and utilization of the catch. Development prospects, the institutional arrangements and international issues relevant to the sector are also reviewed.

Commissioned by the FAO regional office in Bangkok, a review of inland capture fisheries in eight Southeast Asian countries shows that statistics about the sector are severely underestimated and fail to give an adequate idea of its real importance. The actual production from inland capture fisheries in these countries is likely to be at least three times as much as that reported for freshwater aquaculture production. Report RAP 2002/11 is based on field trips to Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand and the author’s professional experience in Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam. The document provides a regional overview of statistics collection and reporting methods used, the sources of error in the official statistics, other constraints to data collection and recommends strategies for improving these. A second section reviews the current state of inland capture fisheries statistics in the eight countries that were reviewed.

Living aquatic resources play a vital role in providing food security and income for the rural poor in Asia, especially women. Aquaculture development interventions should bear this in mind. Experts from eight countries (Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Laos, Nepal, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand) met in Bangkok in February 2002 to share experiences and discuss ways of making aquaculture an effective tool for poverty alleviation in the region. The consultation - jointly organized with NACA - responded to the growing awareness within the aquatic resource sector of the need to address poverty more directly. The session noted that poor - friendly aquaculture technologies are largely in place and aquaculture development for poverty alleviation should focus on effective extension of low - cost technologies, appropriate management practices and securing access and control to the poor.

Forestry

Covering a quarter of the world’s land area, the Asia-Pacific region has about 15 percent of the world’s 3.8 billion hectares of forest. The green cover has to meet the diverse environmental, economic, cultural and social needs of more than half the world’s people living in these countries. Asia’s forests provide food, fodder, fuelwood, timber and livelihood to hundreds of millions of people. The forests also sustain one of the world’s richest storehouses of biodiversity.

The forestry sector provides formal and informal employment for millions of people and continues to act as a food reserve in times of hardship. Forests have an important role in supporting agriculture in the mainly rural Asian nations by protecting watersheds and water quality. Furthermore, forestry is a significant contributor to export earnings in many countries.

In recent decades, many countries in Asia and the Pacific have realized the importance of forests and there is growing awareness of and commitment to forest management and public involvement in forest management decisions. This has resulted in a significant impact on forest conservation, and the problem of destructive logging practices is addressed in several countries.

The use of plantation forests to substitute for wood from natural forests is increasing with Asia-Pacific countries leading the world in forest plantation development. However, deforestation continues because of weak regulation and law enforcement, and continuing incentives for competing land uses. This, along with forest degradation, wasteful use and sharp inequalities in the distribution of forest benefits, remain serious problems that require novel solutions and joint action by all those with an interest in forests. Forest crime and corruption are also serious threats to the region’s forests.

Many countries in the region are now decentralizing forest management into the hands of local communities that are directly in touch with the forests. This fundamental shift from large - scale government forestry to small - scale, community - based forestry management - often called devolution - is increasingly proving to be an effective way to use forests sustainably and conserve biodiversity.

A key concern is the sustainable use of wood and non - wood forest products. FAO gives high priority to the production, trade and marketing of these products to support livelihoods in the rural areas of Asia and the Pacific.

FAO supports the Asia-Pacific Forestry Commission (APFC) - see the Internet web site http://www.apfcweb.org - established in 1949 as a forum for advising and taking action on key forestry issues pertinent to Asia-Pacific. The APFC developed a Code of practice for forest harvesting in Asia-Pacific to reduce negative impacts and enhance sustainability of forest resources. The code guides countries in drafting national harvesting codes. A regional strategy for implementing the code was developed and a complementary regional training strategy in its support was published as RAP 2001/15.

To support countries in their efforts to encourage forest plantation development, FAO coordinated a series of national studies on the impacts of incentives for private sector establishment and management of plantations. A workshop was held in March 2002 in Manila, bringing together forestry experts from Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines and Thailand along with FAO specialists to discuss the national studies. The meeting was supported by the European Commission - FAO Partnership Programme and the United States Department of Agriculture/Forest Service. The results of the studies including a regional overview will be presented to the 19th APFC session, scheduled to take place in Mongolia in August 2002.

Several Asia-Pacific countries have declared their natural forests ‘off limits’ to logging companies by imposing logging bans or other restrictions on timber production. These policies have effectively closed legal timber harvest operations in many areas. FAO has carried out a groundbreaking study on the effectiveness of logging bans as a means of conserving natural forests. The study examines experiences in six countries (China, New Zealand, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Viet Nam). Publication RAP 2001/08 (and its summary RAP 2001/10), presents the results of a two - year study conducted under the auspices of APFC.

Various timber - producing countries in the Asia-Pacific region have recognized the substantial potential of reduced impact logging (RIL) in advancing sustainable forest management. Their efforts to promote improved timber harvesting are supported by several organizations, including the International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO), the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), and the USDA Forest Service. In response to these challenges and opportunities, an International conference on the application of reduced impact logging to advance sustainable forest management was held in Kuching, Malaysia attended by more than 250 participants.

Field researchers in the Philippines have developed a practical, low - cost technique known as Assisted Natural Regeneration (ANR), for restoring forests on imperata grasslands. ANR is used to restore the forests that once occupied these lands. During 2001, FAO supported forest rehabilitation in the Asia-Pacific region by bringing senior forestry officers from Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Laos, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Viet Nam together for workshops and study tours to observe and discuss ANR in the Philippines, giving special attention to the advantages of low cost, fast results, bio - diversity and environmental stability inherent in the ANR approach.

To advance the understanding and enhance awareness of the potential for community - based fire management, an international conference entitled Communities in flames was organized in July 2001, in Balikpapan, Indonesia. More than 120 individuals from 21 countries participated. The conference was organized by Project FireFight South East Asia, the Regional Community Forestry Training Center (RECOFTC) and FAO. FAO also supported case studies of community - based fire management in China and India.

The first international conference on domesticated elephants was organized in February 2001 by FAO in Bangkok. The meeting reviewed the present situation of domesticated elephants in Asia focussing on the socio - economic and environmental conditions for the care and management of the elephants. Eighty participants from 19 countries attended, mostly from Asia. The participants were elephant owners and managers, veterinarians and animal husbandry experts with hands - on elephant experience, and representatives from governments and non - governmental organizations.

Agricultural support systems

Deregulation, liberalization and globalization of trade in agricultural products under the new WTO regulations have a considerable impact on domestic agricultural producers in the region. Small farmers need support not only to be more productive, but also to make their produce more marketable in order to enhance their incomes.

In the present era of globalization there is a critical need to strengthen the capabilities of small farmers to move from subsistence production to agricultural enterprises. Commercializing small farmers is a very complex process involving the cultural and psychological settings of the farmers themselves as well as the economic and market - oriented performance of the agricultural sector through increased efficiency of the farms and the private and public providers of related support services.

To effectively build the capacity of small resource - poor farmers to adopt market - oriented farm production will generally require some form of group action for the identification of appropriate commercial activities; use business management principles and practices; add value and market agricultural products; and access services such as rural and micro finance.

To accomplish this aim, the FAO regional office promotes market - oriented farm production and support to small farmers. It also works with the private sector to provide agricultural inputs to rural areas, and develop efficient marketing chains for diverse agricultural products to meet both rural and urban needs.

Farmers in the region also need assistance to reduce heavy post - production losses and add value to their produce. FAO is assisting Asia-Pacific countries to develop post - production loss prevention programmes and agro - processing technologies, especially for cereals and horticultural crops. The aim is to enhance rural employment and incomes through development of agro - industries, value - added products and full utilization of raw materials.

FAO helps enhance rural employment and income opportunities both on farm and off farm; promotes a diversified and integrated market - oriented farming system approach for sustainable development; and enhances the managerial capacities of the small holders in support of commercial agriculture through improved agricultural extension strategies.

Rural and micro finance are increasingly important tools of rural and agricultural development in Asia and the Pacific. FAO promotes viable rural banking, savings and agricultural credit schemes as tools to alleviate poverty. However, lack of proper administration, recording and accounting systems to process the huge number of transactions associated with this type of finance, is a common problem.

A study on small farmers’ diversification in Cambodia, Laos, Nepal and Viet Nam is analyzing the macro - level socio - economic elements of smallholder farming in the region and preparing specific case studies giving real examples of and potential for further expansion of viable agricultural diversification in Asia.

The FAO regional office is reviewing the training guide on farm management for agricultural extension. The strategy to implement this activity includes the training of trainers for message identification, farm planning and management.

Government and private sector experts from China, India, Indonesia, Republic of Korea, Nepal, Philippines and Thailand attended a mini round table meeting on marketing and food security in Bangkok in November 2001.

The FAO regional office commissioned translations of the summary proceeding of the Feeding Asian Cities seminar held in November 2000 in Bangkok, into Bahasa Indonesian, Bengali and Thai languages.

In follow - up to the 1996 WFS, FAO and the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) organized a workshop on agribusiness development with representatives from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand in November 2001. The meeting considered ways of making better use of agricultural and food engineering knowledge to improve food supply and farmers’ incomes. An exhibition of agricultural and food industry machinery was also held at the venue.

In collaboration with GTZ, the FAO regional office acts as the global development and support centre for the MicroBanking system, currently in use in more than 1 100 offices worldwide. The new Windows - based version, called MBWin, is the system of choice for a wide variety of rural finance and micro finance institutions (e.g. Cambodia, East Timor, Nepal and Thailand). Six training courses were held for participants from Africa, Asia and Europe, and the software upgrade with added functionalities for group - technologies is used by institutions such as the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh.

FAO maintains close collaboration with development partners dealing with rural and micro finance such as the Asia-Pacific Rural and Agricultural Credit Association (APRACA), the Association of Food and Agricultural Marketing Agencies in Asia and the Pacific (AFMA) and ESCAP.



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