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Cambodian rice farmers turn guardians of the forest

by Matt Blomberg | @BlombergMD | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 28 August 2020 15:24 GMT

Workers transplant young rice crops, in Tmatboey, Cambodia, on July 7, 2020. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Matt Blomberg

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Farmers who once had to sell at rock bottom prices - and supplement their income cutting trees - are getting a better deal

By Matt Blomberg

PREAH VIHEAR, Cambodia, Aug 28 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - By the end of October each year, the trucks would begin rolling into Tmatboey in the remote northern plains of Cambodia, marking the final sprint among Nhem Siphan and hundreds of rice farmers harvesting their annual cash crop.

Buyers would stand over farmers, manipulate scales, understate the quality of crops, or renegotiate after coming to terms, knowing they held all the power in the transaction.

Desperate for cash, some would sell early at basement prices, while those who held out risked missing their one big pay day of the year, Siphan said.

"How many tonnes of rice could I carry by ox-cart? How far is the market? Who do I talk to?" Siphan, 70, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"It's impossible. We had no option but to sell."

For years, farmers supplemented their income by turning trees into ox carts for sale, expanding their rice fields, or hunting endangered animals, all inside the Kulen Promtep Wildlife Sanctuary.

But now rice fields are becoming forest again and species thought lost are returning, under the protection of the same farmers, who have partnered with a social enterprise that pays a premium for their crops.

"My life has never been easier," said Siphan, sitting under his tidy, stilted home. "All I have to worry about is the weather."

Siphan is one of about 1,500 farmers partnered with ethically-driven Ibis Rice, which guarantees above-market prices to "wildlife friendly" farmers who patrol the forest for poachers and loggers while nurturing chemical-free paddy fields.

The project was established inside three protected areas in northern Preah Vihear province, and is now expanding into illegal logging hotspots in one of the world's most heavily deforested countries.

"Obviously, we want to work in the places most important for conservation ... on the frontiers of deforestation," said Ibis Rice Chief Executive Nicholas Spencer.

"It can be very complicated but in some ways it's the only answer."

Cambodia has been beset by disputes over land ownership and forest encroachment since the Maoist Khmer Rouge regime destroyed all property records in the 1970s.

Rice cultivation remains a staple of rural life but with poor market access, farmers have largely missed out despite growing some of the world's most sought after varieties.

After initially struggling to get a foothold in the market, Ibis Rice - which was set up by the Wildlife Conservation Society in 2009 - is set to turn a profit in 2020.

"We are starting to find our niche - with the health conscious, well travelled, international consumer," said Spencer, outlining plans to double the 1,200 tonnes of rice it bought last year and also move into cashews and cassava.

"The problem now is not market, it's production - training enough farmers to produce enough quality, be certified and follow the rules," he said.

Agronomist Sopheak Phearun inspects a rice crop, near Tmatboey, Cambodia, on July 7, 2020. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Matt Blomberg

RICE POLICE

Sopheak Phearun, an agronomist with environmental charity Sansom Mlup Prey, monitors the health of crops and investigates reports of farmers breaching agreements with Ibis Rice. "It's tricky.

If (farmers) are removed from the programme, we no longer have any way to influence their behaviour," he said while inspecting a crop reported as diseased.

About 22 farmers were cut loose in 2019, he said, but most returned to the programme in 2020, pledging compliance again.

"If they want to return, they just have to rescind the land they cleared, or stop using the chemicals," he said.

Srey Ul, a community leader in Tmatboey, said the project had completely changed lives in the village and the environment.

"Day and night, people used to cut the forest here. It was impossible to stop them. There was no other way to earn money," he said.

These days, farmers are able to pay labourers instead of working their children, who attend school more often, he said.

Nhem Siphan explains how farmers previously expanded their rice fields into the Kulen Prom Tep Wildlife Sanctuary, in Tmatboey, Cambodia, on July 7, 2020. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Matt Blomberg

Cambodia lost more than a quarter of its tree cover between 2001 and 2018, according to satellite data collated by Global Forest Watch.

The Environment Ministry, which has been criticized for not stemming the destruction of forest, called for the model to be expanded into other protected areas.

"The project strengthens the livelihoods of local communities, cutting off people from jobs such as cutting trees and hunting," ministry spokesman Neth Pheaktra said.

In Tmatboey, Phet Aet thought she would spend the rest of her life working for others after her husband died 10 years ago.

She was left with two hectares of fertile land but did not have the seeds, equipment or expertise to work it until she was recruited into the Ibis Rice programme three years ago.

"First I started with my hands and a hoe; now I have an ox and a tilling machine," she said, showing off compliance checklists that partner farmers are asked to follow.

"Ibis Rice changed my life completely. You could say it has been a good replacement for my husband."

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Deadly land conflicts seen rising as threats from industry grows

(Reporting by Matt Blomberg, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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