Agricultural Land

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Topic: Agriculture, Recovery and Reconstruction
Sub-title: The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Government of Myanmar's Department of Agriculture (DoA) recently conducted a series of training sessions to support the capacity development of farmers and technical experts. The training aimed to support and restore the agricultural production and livelihoods of communities affected by the heavy monsoon rains in southern Myanmar.
Topic: Agriculture, Recovery and Reconstruction
Description: "A total of 214 farmers from communities in Mon and Kayin States and Tanintharyi Region participated in face-to-face training sessions in the following topics. Good Agricultural Practices: The topics covered in this session included farming practices such as vegetable production, soil fertility management and the proper use of fertilizers to help farmers improve their yields. Participating farmers gained knowledge on practices aimed towards enhancing the production of safe, high quality food, promoting environmentally friendly agricultural practices, and ensuring the welfare of farm workers. Climate-Smart Agriculture: The training session was designed to help farmers understand how climate-induced shocks affect the agricultural sector and share climate-smart agricultural practices that enable families to improve production in a sustainable manner. Nutrition: The session covered topics related to basic nutrition including a balanced diet, meal planning, food hygiene, and the special feeding needs of children, women and men. Improving Knowledge: Post-Monsoon Forums In relation to strengthening early warning early action systems, FAO and the Myanmar Department of Meteorology and Hydrology organized virtual Post-Monsoon Forums in December 2020 for technical officers from relevant line ministries and agencies to share experiences, challenges and lessons learned during the 2020 southwest monsoon season. Some 200 technical officers participated in the discussions which aimed to review the southwest monsoon seasonal forecasts and seasonal climate and water level forecasts in Mon and Kayin States and Tanintharyi Region. Furthermore, the forums also aimed to solicit feedback from end users on the usability of the forecasts and recommendations to enhance the early warning system in order to respond to potential disasters through early action. Participants raised recommendations, gaps and challenges such as the need for meteorological information technology training for DoA staff, dissemination of real-time meteorological information, capacity development on collection and storage of meteorological records, installation of weather sensors in townships (where there are no meteorological centers in the region) and strengthened coordination and sharing of meteorological information and forecast reports with the DoA..."
Source/publisher: Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) (Rome) via "Reliefweb" (New York)
2021-01-06
Date of entry/update: 2021-01-07
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Sub-title: Under a land reformation act, millions of farmers across Myanmar could be forced from land they have tilled for generations. Many are unaware of the danger they face. Peter Yeung and Carlotta Dotto report from Yangon.
Description: "It took less than a day for Daw Oo Naing's entire banana plantation to be destroyed. A group of 21 men carrying long knives arrived quietly in the morning and made quick work of hacking down her 600 trees, which were still young with tender trunks. Oo Naing said she tried to drive them away; using a slingshot to defend her ancestral land. "I will protect my plantation with my life," she said. "It will be the legacy of my children." But her effort was futile. Her livelihood was demolished. Under Myanmar's Vacant, Fallow and Virgin Lands Management Act (VFV), introduced in 2012 as part of a slew of measures to bring in large-scale investment and development to rural areas, Oo Naing's land ownership was not legally binding. Read more: Thailand's war on drugs targets meth from Myanmar Although Oo Naing's family had reared the land for generations, their ownership was not officially documented. This is a common situation among Myanmar's 134 ethnic minorities, who constitute a third of the country' population of 51 million. Their land was considered vacant by the authorities. In effect, anyone could claim it. For example, Chinese businesses have taken over banana plantations for mass-export in Kachin. And in Rakhine state land has been taken over to build oil and gas pipelines..."
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Source/publisher: "DW News" (Germany)
2019-03-01
Date of entry/update: 2019-10-07
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Sub-title: The Myanmar government has tightened a law on so-called 'vacant, fallow and virgin' land, and farmers are at risk.
Description: "Han Win Naung is besieged on his own land. Last September, local administrators in Myanmar's southern Tanintharyi region put up a sign at the edge of his 5.7-hectare farm that read "Under Management Ownership - Do Not Trespass". They felled the trees and started building a drug rehabilitation facility and an agriculture training school on opposite ends of his plot. He was eventually informed that the administrators were challenging his claim to the land and had filed charges against him under a controversial law that could see him jailed for three years. "I didn't know what this law was," the 37-year-old farmer told Al Jazeera. "I didn't understand what was happening to us. They also asked us to move. We don't have anywhere else to go." Han Win Naung is accused of violating the Vacant, Fellow and Virgin (VFV) Lands Management Law which requires anyone living on land categorised as "vacant, fallow, and virgin" to apply for a permit to continue using it for the next 30 years..."
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Source/publisher: "Al Jazeera" (Qatar)
2019-04-04
Date of entry/update: 2019-10-02
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Description: "A 5,000-acre tract of farmland confiscated by the government has sat unused in Tanintharyi Region for almost 15 years. More than 1,000 farmers were evicted from the land in 2004 to make room for urban development, but although the project was never completed, local farmers are still not allowed to return to their fields. This week Doh Athan partners with Dawei Watch to report on an old battle to win back the confiscated land..."
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Source/publisher: "Frontier Myanmar" via Dohathan
2019-09-03
Date of entry/update: 2019-09-04
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Sub-title: A quick introduction to the past, present and future of Myanmar’s most important industry.
Description: "The most common crops are rice, beans and pulses, and maize, in that order. In general, farmers grow rice and maize during the monsoon season and beans and pulses during the dry season, although farmers in the temperate highlands often try for a second harvest of rice and maize if there is enough water left after the rains. Likewise, in the water-rich Ayeyarwady Delta, farmers often eschew dry season beans for another paddy harvest. Rice (including Myanmar’s most famous variety, paw san) and beans and pulses (especially chickpeas, green gram and black gram) are grown basically everywhere. Indeed, 80 percent of all Myanmar farmers grow rice and most plant beans and pulses after the paddy growing season, according to a survey published in 2016 by the World Bank Group. That said, the rice production peaks around the Ayeyarwady Delta, while more beans and pulses (which can tolerate hotter, dryer conditions) are grown in the central dry zone. Maize comes a distant third in terms of area cultivated. Unlike beans and rice, maize thrives in the temperate highlands, especially in Shan State, Sagaing Region and Chin State..."
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Source/publisher: "Frontier Myanmar"
2018-03-26
Date of entry/update: 2019-08-31
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Sub-title: Jim Taylor, CEO and co-founder of Proximity Designs, is on a mission to help Myanmar farmers gain access to finance. The funds will help them pay for seeds to plant crops, labour to till the land, and basic infrastructure, such as irrigation equipment and
Description: "“If you want to help the people of Myanmar, farming is a pretty good place to start. Despite the country’s rapid urbanisation in recent years, the population remains overwhelmingly rural, with 70 percent of people relying on the land for their livelihoods,” said a recent blog post by Proximity Designs. This came after the US government’s Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) committed US$8 million to Proximity Finance on April 3 to support expanded micro lending to rural Myanmar borrowers, primarily smallholder farmers. The Skoll Foundation, a long-term supporter of Proximity Finance, committed an additional US$2 million of subordinated debt as part of the co-financing package. “By expanding their access to affordable credit, OPIC’s partnership with Proximity Designs will equip smallholder farmers to improve their yields, expand their enterprises, and help their communities thrive,” said OPIC’s acting President and CEO David Bohigian. Proximity Finance, which designs its loans to meet the needs of smallholder farmers, is the microfinance arm of Proximity Designs, a social enterprise that serves the needs of over 100,000 households in 2000 villages, primarily in farming..."
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Source/publisher: "Myanmar Times"
2019-05-13
Date of entry/update: 2019-08-12
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Description: "Ecopoint has teamed up with the Environmental Education Media Project (EEMP), and John D. Liu, Founder & Director of EEMP, is proud to bring you this film. In 2005, the Chinese government, in cooperation with the World Bank, completed the world's largest watershed restoration on the upper banks of the Yellow River. Woefully under-publicized, the $500 million enterprise transformed an area of 35,000 square kilometers on the Loess Plateau — roughly the area of Belgium — from dusty wasteland to a verdant agricultural center..."
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Source/publisher: EcopointAsia TV, World Bank Group
2012-06-26
Date of entry/update: 2019-07-31
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Topic: land degradation, land-use management practices
Topic: land degradation, land-use management practices
Description: "The United Nations Development Programme is seeking a Integrated Land and Seascape Management (ILSM) Specialist.This post is opened for Myanmar Nationals only..."
Source/publisher: United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) via United Nations Development Programme
2018-02-16
Date of entry/update: 2019-07-30
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Topic: agricultural land, agricultural practices, agricultural productivity, agriculture, agroforestry, capacity building, crop management, drought tolerant crops, land-use management practices, sustainability sustainable agriculture, sustainable land management
Topic: agricultural land, agricultural practices, agricultural productivity, agriculture, agroforestry, capacity building, crop management, drought tolerant crops, land-use management practices, sustainability sustainable agriculture, sustainable land management
Description: "The International Fertilizer Development Center IFDC is accepting qualified applications for the five-year USAID-Funded Myanmar Agri-Food Systems Activity, which will facilitate the transformation of agriculture and food systems through increasing the productivity, inclusiveness, and competitiveness of key value chains. The Senior Agricultural Specialist in Crop Agronomy and Soils will provide leadership in identifying appropriate good agricultural practices and farming technologies for various agricultural extension systems. They will manage and support sectors and sub-sectors of agricultural, agribusiness, and value chain development project interventions..."
Source/publisher: United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) via International Fertilizer Development Center IFDC
2019-04-23
Date of entry/update: 2019-07-30
Grouping: Individual Documents
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Description: "Agriculture accounts for 26 per cent of Myanmar’s GDP and employs almost half of the country’s workforce.1 It is the primary source of livelihood for most people living in rural areas.2 Migration for work is also common in Myanmar and growing even more so: the country’s rapid growth in recent years has coincided with a marked increase in both internal and international migration. Migration is tightly linked to agricultural work: many migrants move from rural to urban areas and from agriculture to other employment sectors. This trend is coinciding with a general transition in Myanmar’s economy away from agriculture and towards industry and services. This briefing paper draws on findings from the CHIME research project to look at how agricultural work drives migration, and how migration affects the agricultural sector. It identifies opportunities for policymakers to help make agriculture and migration promote sustainable, equitable development..."
Source/publisher: International Organization for Migration (IOM)
2017-01-01
Date of entry/update: 2019-06-21
Grouping: Individual Documents
Language: English
Format : pdf
Size: 2.16 MB
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Description: "According to the current land utilization, about 11 million hectares or 16% of the total land area is under cultivation. Since a total of about 18 million hectares is estimated as suitable for agricultural purposes, some 7 million hectares of new land can be brought under crop cultivation and livestock farming. In bringing new land under agricultural use, it is important that the use of scientific techniques of land evaluation and land use planning be made mandatory to ensure the suitability and optimum use of land. In agricultural planning, land evaluation sets up a link between the basic survey of resources and the making of decisions on land use. As part of land use planning, the Land Resources Information System is vital to ensure that environmentally valuable lands are not encroached upon and that adverse environmental impacts can be avoided. To ensure conservation of the resource base, the effective programmes should be designed to address the following constraints in agriculture; * Low productivity due to agro climatic conditions; * Low productivity due to water shortage; * Low productivity due to soil degradation, irrigation induced water logging and salinity in dry zone... A number of agricultural research stations and centres are presently carried out research on plant varieties, crop patterns, irrigation techniques, water storage techniques and soil analysis. The programmes and activities of those centres should be reviewed to ascertain their effectiveness and to assist in the formulation of new programmes that can address key productivity constraints... CONTENTS: 1. Topography; 2. Climate; 3. Land Utilization; 4. Soils in Dry Zone; 5. Land cover; 6. Generation of Slope Maps, Erosion Susceptibility Maps; 7. Regenaration Mapping; 8. Land Degradation, Environmental Conditions And Socio-Economic Impacts; 9. Conclusions.
Source/publisher: FAO
2003-12-15
Date of entry/update: 2010-08-17
Grouping: Individual Documents
Language: English
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