22/06/20

COVID-19 begins to tell on Cambodian farming

Cambodian farmers-main
Possible water shortages may affect rice production in Cambodia, adding to the problems brought by COVID-19. Copyright: Brad Collis/Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (CC BY 2.0).

Speed read

  • Farming Cambodia has so far escaped the effects of COVID-19 disruptions
  • But, as the wet season begins in June, farming inputs and credit are scarce
  • Farmers will be needing support from the government and aid agencies

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[MANILA] While Cambodia has been less affected by the health impacts of COVID-19, there are fears that smallholder farms will be hit hard during the wet season that runs from June to September as the fallout from restrictions and lockdown measures takes hold.
 
Agriculture is vital for the Cambodian economy as it employs about 3 million workers, with the rice sector employing a significant majority being the country’s main crop and the most important export commodity, according to the World Bank.

“Agricultural inputs such as seeds, fish fingerlings and breeding chickens are not adequate for the next season”

Alexandre Huynh, Food and Agriculture Organization representative in Cambodia

Alexandre Huynh, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) representative in Cambodia, tells SciDev.Net that movement restrictions because of COVID-19 and limited transportation add to the problems that may affect the production of crops for both personal consumption and for sale. “Agricultural inputs such as seeds, fish fingerlings and breeding chickens are not adequate for the next season.”
 
Possible water shortages, despite the wet season, is another issue that farmers may have to contend with. “Water scarcity in different areas may compound the difficult situation for rice farmers,” says Rica Joy Flor, innovation systems scientist at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).   
 
Flor, who is based in Phnom Penh, adds that farmers may not have the funds to procure inputs. “It is predicted that some farmers may not be able to access the credit they need at the start of the wet season,” says Flor. “Many rice farmers depend on credit, especially at the start of the cropping season.”

Taking microloans as a coping strategy to meet household needs and consumption, especially by the poor, can be foreseen,” Huynh says. She adds that this, however, could lead farming households into debt traps.  
 
“There are many households that are just above the poverty line,” Flor says. “What this means is that many of them are in precarious situations, where a shock such as delayed payment, drought-damaged crop, illness in the household or lack of credit would have significant impacts on the households or their farms.”
 
For its part, the government has offered debt relief or compromise loans with micro-finance institutions as part of interventions to support farmers and boost food production in response to the COVID-19 situation, says Srey Vuthy, secretary-general and spokesperson for the agricultural ministry.   
 
As of now, rice farming is running normally, says Vuthy, noting that rice production in Cambodia has grown from 8.2 million tonnes in 2010 to 10.8 million tonnes in 2019. 

 

Cambodia and the IRRI have signed a work plan to strengthen the rice value chain and promote the modernisation of the agriculture sector. Though drawn up before the pandemic, the plan has various entry points to factor in COVID-19-related concerns that “address different constraints as well as broader issues in the rice sector”, says Flor.

Meanwhile, the non-profit Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO) is collaborating with farmers to maintain production of high-quality rice that is produced using ecologically sustainable farming techniques and exported to Europe, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the US, says Ponhrith Kan, the agency’s programme development and partnership advisor for livelihoods in Cambodia.  
 
VSO is also providing support through market links, agronomic advice and farming inputs such as seeds and fertilisers. Farmers, with the help of the organisation, are now also using social media platforms to stay in touch with agricultural experts and their respective cooperatives.   

VSO Cambodia
Image credit: Andrew Aitchinson

This piece was produced by SciDev.Net’s Asia & Pacific desk.