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Our News
Adapting smallholder farming to survive climate change
The WWF Nedbank Green Trust has partnered with Indigo Development and Change in a project that works to equip local smallholder farmers with climate resilience.
In an effort to conserve the glorious biodiversity of the region and equip local smallholder farmers with skills and methods to combat the scourge of climate change, the WWF Nedbank Green Trust has partnered with Indigo Development and Change and launched the “Sustainable Stewardship with Small-scale Farmers in the Suid Bokkeveld Project.”
“The project focuses on developing the capacities of small-scale farmers in the Suid Bokkeveld in order to allow them to farm more wisely in the face of climate change and to promote stewardship to sustain the area’s unique biodiversity and ecosystems. The intention of the project is that at least 20 small-scale farmers undergo extensive training in Climate Wise Agriculture (CWA). They will test out climate wise approaches to farming in trial plots on local farms that will be set up for evaluating and monitoring alternative practices in order to develop location specific strategies for sustainable agriculture,” said Shannon Parring, Director of Indigo Development and Change.
CWA guides the transformation and reorientation of agricultural systems in order to ensure food security and agricultural longevity in the face of a rapidly changing climate. CWA aims to build resilience to climate change, sustainably increase agricultural productivity and incomes and, where possible, reduce greenhouse gas emissions without resorting to GMO technologies.
“Farmers participating in the project receive CWA training and participate in quarterly Climate Change Preparedness workshops so as to keep up to date on long-term forecasts and share their strategies for adaptation to anticipated and experienced weather events. Recently the participating farmers visited Goedgedacht, near Riebeek Kasteel, and Spier, in the Stellenbosch area, to learn about alternative approaches to organic farming in the context of caring for natural resources in a time of rapidly changing climate. The knowledge exchange visits inspired the Suid Bokkeveld farmers to adopt some of the concepts and methods that they learned about,” continued Parring.
The sustainable stewardship programme that is supported by the project engages with willing small-scale farmers about working to conserve the unique biodiversity of the Bokkeveld Plateau. This area is host to more than 1350 different types of plants, many of which produce stunning floral displays after good rains. More than 80 of these plants are endemic to the Bokkeveld Plateau.
The idea of stewardship has been actively promoted amongst the large-scale farmers of the area by the Northern Cape Department of Environment and Nature Conservation and its partners, but these efforts have tended to by-pass farmers who have access to smaller areas of land.
Said Parring: “For the small-scale farmers of the Suid Bokkeveld the word stewardship is not a familiar one. However, in their approach and methods of farming it is evident that many farmers have long used the land in harmony with nature. We intend to stimulate the stewardship approach to extend beyond boundaries, fences and farm gates to the wider landscape. To this end we intend to share what we learn in this project with a much wider farming community. As with technology and many other aspects of modern life, farming approaches are also evolving over time, hence this project seeks to contribute to enabling the participating farmers to learn new ways to respond pro-actively to the changes in climate.”
“We hope that other small and large-scale farmers, researchers and other stakeholders will visit this arid region of South Arica and learn about the methods suitable for sustainable agriculture under arid conditions affected by climate change.”
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© Therese Brinkcate
Harvesting rooibos in the Suid Bokkeveld