21/01/20

Growing extra trees, shrubs raises smallholders $50/year

A charcoal producer, standing beside a pile of wood that ready to be burned into charcoal
A farmer, standing beside a pile of wood that he harvested for domestic use Copyright: Mokhamad Edliadi/CIFOR, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

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  • Study reveals economic benefits of growing trees and shrubs on farmland
  • Practice has long been promoted for environmental reasons
  • Expert calls on the Kenyan government to encourage more smallholders to follow suit

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[NAIROBI] When smallholder farmers mix trees and shrubs into their lands it increases their revenues by almost $50 per person per year, a study has revealed.

The practice – known as agroforestry – has long been promoted as a way to protect the environment by reducing the risk of drought and preventing soil erosion.

However, the research study in Kenya reveals that there is also an economic incentive for farmers to take it up.

“This is just under US$50 per year per capita, or about three per cent of overall household consumption expenditure,” explains Karl Hughes at the World Agroforestry Centre, who was the lead author of the study.

During the study, published in the journal World Development this month (7 January), the team investigated the level of tree and shrub growing among 432 smallholders in 60 Kenyan villages where agroforestry had been promoted for over a decade.

They matched 61 villages not using agroforestry to the 60 villages across Bungoma and Kakamega counties of Kenya where Vi Agroforestry, a Swedish non-governmental organisation programme, had promoted agroforestry to smallholders.


Uptake low

Judith Oduol, a co-author of the study and an agricultural economist at the World Agroforestry Centre, says that while agroforestry has been promoted for its potential to rehabilitate degraded landscapes, its potential for improving status of the recipients of technology such as household income, food security and helping people cope climate change consequences is limited due to low uptake.

“Adoption of agroforestry and other natural resource management practices is still low in low-income countries,” says Oduol, adding that there is a need for new approaches to boost the scale-up and adoption of innovative agroforestry interventions.

But Augustine Bunyasi, a smallholder farmer who adopted agroforestry about a decade ago, says that most rural farmers may have not adopted the practice for lack of information on the need for agroforestry.

“A farmer wants to understand why every activity on the farm matters,” says Bunyasi. He calls for increased sensitisation, especially on the socioeconomic benefits to smallholders in villages.
 
This, he says, should be done through peer groups to have a lasting impact rather than using non-locals to sensitise the smallholders.
 
Oscar Simanto, the head of Forestry Extension Management Department at that Kenya Forest Service, says that he is not surprised the study found agroforestry to have increased household incomes of smallholders.
 
“The power of agroforestry systems as an important source of rural incomes and food has not been fully exploited,” he tells SciDev.Net.Simanto cites challenges facing agroforestry in Kenya including the biased sharing of benefits in favour of men at household level, poor access to markets, and weak institutional capacities of associations to represent the interests of farmers.
 
He also said there were inadequate support services from agricultural workers who teach famers new knowledge and practices to help farmers acquire critical information required for growing quality trees.
 
“In order for agroforestry to thrive beyond subsistence, the government should purposively provide a conducive policy and legislative environment and incentives for its development,” Simanto says.

This piece was produced by SciDev.Net’s Sub-Saharan Africa English desk.

References

Karl Hughes and others Assessing the downstream socioeconomic impacts of agroforestry in Kenya (World Development, 7 January 2020).