Climate Change Adaptation and the Agriculture–Food System in Myanmar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Climate Change Impacts and Vulnerability
2.1. Historic Weather and Climate
2.2. Projected Weather and Climate
3. Key Agriculture Sector Vulnerabilities
3.1. Agro-Ecological Features and Agri-Food System Vulnerability
3.2. Water Resources
4. Major Ecosystem Vulnerabilities
4.1. Upland
4.2. Lowland
5. National Strategies, Plans, and Institutions Relevant to Climate Change
5.1. Institutional Framework
5.2. Key Stakeholders and Adaptation Priorities
6. Climate Change Adaptation Measures of Farm Households in Myanmar
7. Challenges and Constraints for Addressing Vulnerability and Increasing Resilience
8. Discussion of Constraints to Effective Adaptation
9. Recommendations to Overcome Policy Coordination and Adaptation Constraints
- (1)
- Investment: Promoting climate-smart agriculture (CSA) practices and adaptation strategies necessitates significant financial investment from both private and public sectors. Some CSA and adaptation measures require investment in research and extension services so that successive governments may provide updated climate adaptation solutions to farmers in places where farmers can extensively use these practices.
- (2)
- Policy and Incentives: The Myanmar government should establish a more conducive environment for better farming system resilience and farm household adoption of CSA practices through policy and incentive initiatives. Farmers, for example, should be compensated for the value of their environmental contributions as well as the value of their physical production in environmentally appropriate methods.
- (3)
- Private sector and other key stakeholders: Better regional and national planning and management mechanisms should be put in place to ensure improved networking and coordination between key stakeholders in Myanmar’s government and private sectors. Climate change adaptation and mitigation actions, including the implementation of CSA initiatives, can be carried out more efficiently and effectively with these improved mechanisms. Implementing the climate-smart villages (CSV) initiative also requires extensive collaboration among individual farmers, government agencies, and other stakeholders.
- (4)
- Capacity building training and extension services: It is also necessary to empower and strengthen the adaptive capacity of key stakeholders, policymakers, development planners, communities, and farmers. This can be accomplished by launching regular training programs, field-based extensions, services, and knowledge-sharing events in collaboration with both the public and private sectors. The farmer field school (FFS) is indeed a platform for farmers to learn innovative agricultural management practices and build new skills and knowledge.
- (5)
- Improving climate change education and awareness: Improving education and awareness on climate change is crucial to building public support for climate action. There is still a need to identify effective education and awareness strategies and to evaluate their effectiveness in promoting climate action in Myanmar.
- (6)
- Community-based resilience planning: Farmers’ and communities’ adaptive capacity and resilience can be strengthened through community-based resilience planning processes and farmers-to-farmers knowledge-sharing initiatives. It is also recommended that local civil society organizations (CSOs), community-based organizations (CBOs), and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) work more collaboratively and cooperatively on community-based resilience planning. Indigenous climate change adaption methods and community-based resource management practices should also be supported and encouraged.
- (7)
- Early warning and early action system (EWEAS: Lack of knowledge on climate change and extreme weather events has negative effects on agricultural yield and farm income, as well as the loss of farm equipment and household possessions. The government of Myanmar needs to speed up the early warning and response system so that it can educate the public as soon as weather and climate conditions change and increase awareness of natural disasters and climate-change-related occurrences. Early weather and climate change information will, in the end, help farmers in taking early action and lessening agricultural losses.
- (8)
- Enhancing climate data and monitoring: High-quality climate data are essential for effective climate change planning and decision making. Further research is needed to improve climate data and monitoring systems in Myanmar, including improving data collection and analysis combined with climate modeling tools.
- (9)
- Development projects and programs: Scaling up and broadening the adoption of CSA initiatives is essential for farm households to become more climate-resilient. Along with recent political instability and civil turmoil, projects promoting climate resilience and development programs are being phased out. Therefore, more development programs and efforts need to be supported to enhance capabilities for climate change resilience and adaptation. Myanmar must act quickly and genuinely to implement its planned climate policies because the country is experiencing a worsening climate crisis.
10. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Farming Systems and Major Crop Production | Indigenous Adaptation Measures | Recommended or Introduced Adaptation Measures | Agro-Ecological Zone | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mix cropping and diversification of farming systems as an adaptation to climate change for crops including rice, peas and beans, sesame, groundnut, maize, and other cash crops such as onion, melon, chili, etc. | Crop- and livestock-related strategies (e.g., sowing seeds from neighboring farmers, livestock breed from friends, or nearby villages) Double cropping (summer paddy program on irrigated paddy land) | Recommended strategies by the Department of Agriculture (DOA) (i.e., good agricultural practices (GAP)) Climate-change-related changes to cropping systems (stress-resistant varieties, adjustment to farming practices) Hybrid rice production technology Good agriculture practice (GAP) | Mostly in central dry zone (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Region) | Need additional investment in research and extension services to achieve higher adoption of these adaptation technologies |
Adaptation through farm management practices for rice, peas and beans, groundnut and sunflower, etc. | Adjusting planting time Cultural-related strategies such as fumigation, cleaning bushes, hand weeding, etc. | Adjusting cultivation methods (i.e., adjusting sowing dates with broadcasting methods, different forms of seedling methods, and transplanting) Utilization of fertilizers, chemical herbicides, and weedicides | Mostly in CDZ (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Regions), Bago and Yangon Regions | Unsystematic application of chemical fertilizers and pesticides lead to soil structural deterioration and harm to both human and ecosystems Need additional capacity-building training for private sectors, farm households, and public sectors |
Crop-related adaptation strategies | Crop diversification | Crop diversification and rotation (i.e., a mix of crop types/varieties and crop rotation techniques) to improve farmer’s income and livelihoods | Mostly in central dry zone (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Region) | Need additional research on which crops should be rotated and diversified |
Soil and water management practices | Soil-related strategies such as manure application, cow-dung application, soil tillage practices, shallow plowing, etc.) | Advanced soil and plant management (organic manure application, plant pest protection, mulching, weeding techniques introduced by government departments, deep plowing with machines, etc.) | Mostly in central dry zone (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Region), Bago, and Ayeyarwady Region | Need to strengthen the adaptive capacity of stakeholders from both private and public sectors as well as farm households |
Banding practices | Improved variety application (i.e., drought-resistant varieties, high-yielding varieties, short-duration varieties) | Ayeyarwady and Bago Region | Department of Agriculture and Research (DAR) (DAR developed eight varieties of deep-water rice and one submergence-tolerant rice variety for flood-prone areas), but there is a need for investment for further research and development | |
Hand weeding and mulching practices | Combination of improved variety and recommended agricultural strategies | CDZ, Bago, and Ayeyarwady Regions | A combination of variety selection and good agricultural practices produces better outcomes on crop production than one farm management practice | |
Agroforestry production systems | Production of rice and annual crops Agroforestry practices Mangrove forestation | Introduction of cash crops, fruit trees/intensification of perennial crop production (i.e., palm oil and rubber) in Tanintharyi Region and Mon State | Coastline areas, particularly in Rakhine and Ayeyarwady Region Chin, Kayin, Kachi, n and Shan Tanintaryi and Mon states | Need additional investment in processing technologies Mangrove forests and a number of agroforestry practices to retard flooding, tidal surge, and further saltwater intrusion to fish ponds, and rice fields |
Crop management system | Conventional seedling practices | Brine seeds or soak rice seeds in salt water before planting to resist saltwater intrusion problems System of rice intensification (SRI) | Mostly at coastline areas such as Ayeyarwady Mostly at Bago, Mandalay, and Sagaing | DAR developed eight varieties of deep-water rice and one submergence-tolerant rice variety for flood-prone areas |
Other technology as adaptation Agricultural development for food security, and poverty reduction | Conventional crop production with a heavy amount of fertilization application Rice-based farming systems Cultivation of rain-fed crops Production of vegetables such as home gardening and household consumption | Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) would contribute to regional food security and environmental protection. Community-level nutrition education and awareness building | In several parts of the country | Need to scale up these good practices throughout Myanmar |
Climate-Smart and Nutrition-Smart Villages (CSVs) | In several parts of the country | Need to scale up these good practices throughout Myanmar | ||
Organic farming technology | In several parts of the country | Need to scale up these good practices throughout Myanmar | ||
Biochar technology and other organic compost-making practices | In several parts of the country | Need to scale up these good practices throughout Myanmar | ||
Hydroponic vegetable production | Mostly in central dry zone (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Region) and Shan State | Need to scale up these good practices throughout Myanmar | ||
Conservation agriculture technology | Mostly in central dry zone (Sagaing, Mandalay, Magwe Region), Shan, Kachin, and Chin State | Provide more public awareness training for conservation agriculture practices, particularly for Inlay lakes in Shan State and Indawgyi Lake in Kachin State | ||
Sun-dried practices | Paddy dryers (post-harvest management) | Ayeyarwady, Bago, Mandalay, and Sagaing | Need additional investment for good post-harvesting and food processing practices | |
Water management practices | Traditional rainwater harvesting practice | Weather-index-based crop insurance | Mostly in central dry zone and Nay Pyi Taw areas | Need additional investment from private sectors |
Submerged irrigation method | Alternative wetting and drying irrigation | Sagaing, Mandalay, and Bago Region | Need additional investment for drainage water management system | |
Rainwater irrigation system | Improved water management and Irrigation practices through building water-resilient infrastructure | Mandalay, Magwe, Sagaing, Bago, and Yangon Regions | Need additional investment for irrigation and drainage systems |
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Aspects | Climate and Weather Parameters | Perception of Farmers on Climate Change | Effects of Climate Change |
---|---|---|---|
Climate variables | -Temperature | Increase | Loss of production/income/foods |
-Precipitation | Increase with shorter monsoon/erratic nature | Loss of crops, properties, aquatic animals | |
Hailstorm | Increase | Damage to farm crops and household properties | |
Natural hazards | -Tropical cyclones | Increase in frequency and intensity | Loss of crops, farm equipment, human lives, damage to farms, and draught animals |
-Flood | Increase in frequency and intensity | Crop damages and loss of farm equipment, household properties | |
-Saltwater intrusion | Increase in frequency and intensity | Damages on paddy crops and certain fish species | |
Impacts on nature | -Agro-ecology | Increase | Change in agro-ecological conditions |
-Water resources (Ocean) | Increase | Alteration of ocean current | |
-Soil | Increase in drought, crack in the ground | Water scarcity, drinking water deficit, groundwater depletion, crop damage | |
-Pests and diseases | Increase in occurrence of pests and disease infestation | Loss of crops, high pesticides cost | |
-Health and wellbeing | Increase in vulnerability of farm household’s wellness | Absent from work/school, lower labor productivity |
Agro-Climate Zones | Geographical Description | Vulnerable Regions and States | Major Crops/Livelihood Activities | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability Status 1 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Delta region | The Ayeyarwady River runs 1200 km (750 miles) from Upper Myanmar to the Andaman Sea. 50,400 km2 of land areas 2500–5500 mm of annual rainfall 2 | Delta areas of Ayeyarwady and Yangon Riverine areas of the Bago region (i.e., Sittaung Riverine areas) | Rice and pulses | Cyclone, storm surges, intense rain, saltwater intrusion, Tsunami, and riverine flood Vulnerability status: high |
Central dry zone | 87,198 km2 or 12.8% of Myanmar’s land area 500–1000 mm of annual rainfall 3 | Sagaing, Mandalay, and Magway Regions | Upland crops, oilseeds, pulses, rice, cotton, irrigated agriculture, and Kaing-Kyun (Silty land) cultivation | Drought, extremely high temperatures, flash floods, riverine floods, Deficit rainfall, and water scarcity Vulnerability status: extremely high |
Coastal (upland and lowland) | 10–15% of the land area of Myanmar The average annual rainfall is highest in Myanmar at 3300 mm 4 | Tanintharyi, Mon Kayin, the Rakhine States, and some parts of the Ayeyarwady Region | Orchards, rice, pulses, upland agriculture, oilseeds, and nipa palm Fishing, fish-farming, fish processing | Cyclone/strong winds, Intense rain, sea level rise Vulnerability status: moderate to high |
Hilly and mountainous areas | Hilly, uneven topography, sloping land, moderate to heavy rainfall | Shan, Kayin, Kachin, and Chin States Some parts of Kayin and Mon State | Upland crops, horticultural crops, and shifting cultivation | Intense rains, landslides Vulnerability status: low to moderate |
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Tun Oo, A.; Boughton, D.; Aung, N. Climate Change Adaptation and the Agriculture–Food System in Myanmar. Climate 2023, 11, 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli11060124
Tun Oo A, Boughton D, Aung N. Climate Change Adaptation and the Agriculture–Food System in Myanmar. Climate. 2023; 11(6):124. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli11060124
Chicago/Turabian StyleTun Oo, Aung, Duncan Boughton, and Nilar Aung. 2023. "Climate Change Adaptation and the Agriculture–Food System in Myanmar" Climate 11, no. 6: 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli11060124
APA StyleTun Oo, A., Boughton, D., & Aung, N. (2023). Climate Change Adaptation and the Agriculture–Food System in Myanmar. Climate, 11(6), 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli11060124