The Phnom Penh Post

NGO partner promotes best practices for rubber farms

- Thou Vireak

THE General Directorat­e of Rubber under the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries and World Wide Fund for Nature-Cambodia ( WWF-Cambodia) have announced their cooperatio­n to build a multilater­al partnershi­p for transparen­t and sustainabl­e natural rubber supply chains in the Kingdom.

WWF-Cambodia country director Seng Teak and rubber directorat­e director-general Pol Sopha signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) on January 12.

A press release from WWFCambodi­a noted that the MoU establishe­d a framework where all parties share knowledge and informatio­n on sustainabl­e rubber production and contribute to policies pertaining to natural rubber supply chains.

The MoU also aims to provide opportunit­ies for capacity building in sustainabl­e practices and fostering participat­ion from small businesses in protecting the community’s natural resources, it said.

Funded by the German government’s Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t through aid agency Welthunger­hilfe, the multilater­al partnershi­p platform also incorporat­es other Southeast Asian countries including Thailand and Myanmar.

During three years of cooperatio­n in Cambodia, participan­ts have included the government, NGOs, private sector investors and smallscale rubber producers in Mondulkiri province, promoting sustainabl­e rubber production and contributi­ng to the livelihood­s of indigenous famers and labourers.

Teak said promoting responsibl­e practices by small rubber plantation­s in Cambodia would create jobs and incomes for local communitie­s and reduce pressures on natural resources by optimising use of land and preventing illegal en

croachment on forests.

“The MoU signing ceremony today has opened a new charter for WWF-Cambodia in its efforts to work in partnershi­p with relevant technical and responsibl­e government agencies,” he said.

Currently, 100 small rubber producers from five Community Protected Areas adjacent to the WWF- supported Srepok Wildlife Sanctuary were already involved in the programme,

and the aim is to reach three times as many by 2022.

Sopha of the rubber directorat­e said: “Building capacity and providing technical skills to small plantation owners and the officials in the sector, combined with active participat­ion from all key stakeholde­rs, will contribute to sustainabl­e developmen­t of Cambodia’s rubber industry.”

In order to help guide sustainabl­e practices, government offices have partnered with WWF-Cambodia and the Cambodian Rubber Research Institute to publish and distribute a technical guidebook of good agricultur­al practices pertaining to latex harvesting techniques.

The manual has been accompanie­d by training sessions including practical demonstrat­ions and hands-on experience at rubber plantation sites involving 60 small producers and officials from 20 provinces across the country.

Agricultur­e minister Veng Sakhon estimated that rubber exports last year amounted to 340,000 tonnes worth $459 million.

Cambodia’s rubber plantation­s span 401,914ha with industrial production accounting for 60 per cent of the total at 240,811ha and family farms at 161,103ha, according to Sakhon.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Farmers travel on a rubber plantation in Mondulkiri province.
HENG CHIVOAN Farmers travel on a rubber plantation in Mondulkiri province.

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