Sunday, November 15, 2009


Agriculture

An estimated 85 per cent of 14 million Cambodians live in rural areas and depend upon agricultural cultivation as their primary means of subsistence or livelihood. Intervention to improve agricultural performance will greatly benefit a large number of people who are among those most affected by poverty.

The Cambodian agriculture & agro-industry sector has developed significantly in recent years and has great potential for investment, employment creation and as a source for economic growth. For instance, rice production has increased by more than 50 per cent since 2005. However, the sector is starting from a low base and suffers from fragmented and weak supply chains, low productivity and underdeveloped infrastructure. Support structures that will enable increased yield, quality and access to markets are also deficient.

The agriculture sector in Cambodia remains underdeveloped due to a lack of investment and reliance on old cultivation techniques and low quality seeds.

In response to the aforementioned constraints, as a Co-Chair of the Agriculture & Agro-industry Working Group, I would like to report the concerns of the private sector regarding the following issues:

Priority Agricultural Products
Most farmers are not informed about the demand for agricultural products in the world or domestic markets. They usually plant the same crops year after year. Now that there is a food crisis, they can obtain better prices for their crops if they plant the right ones, with good quality seeds, in accordance with international standards.

Unfortunately, recently we have seen that prices of agricultural products have decreased unimaginably in the international market. For example, one ton of top-grade rubber used to fetch over $3,000, but now the price is only $1,500; the palm oil price has decreased from $1,200 per ton to only $400 now; the price for tapioca flour has dropped from $530 per ton to only $220. The private sector understands that the Ministry of Commerce has selected 19 priority products for export, but farmers are unaware of this strategy.

The private sector thinks that the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) should encourage the use of land for the development of agriculture and disseminate information on opportunities for farmers in partnership with the Ministry of Commerce. In addition, the private sector suggests that MAFF provide guidance to farmers on which crops to plant, market demand and commodity prices. Then MAFF should source the right seeds and grains to provide to farmers and train them on techniques to obtain better yields.

Contract Farming
Small producers and farmers clearly face the danger of market failure and production problems. This is because these farmers cannot supply the market with sufficient products at an appropriate price. There is no guaranteed price for their products, in particular after harvest, which is a major challenge that small farmers and producers must overcome in the long run. In order to deal with this problem, contract farming can serve as a means to develop the market and to bring about technology transfer, which would benefit both producers and supporting companies.

The private sector thinks that MAFF should encourage contract farming between buying companies and farmers in order to ensure appropriate prices for products and technical assistance. In addition, the private sector would like to request that the Royal Government establish a framework and strengthen enforcement of contracts between farmers and large buying companies in order to ensure nationwide effectiveness.

The aforementioned issues were discussed by the Agriculture and Agro-Industry Working Group on 17 November 2007 under the chairmanship of His Excellency Chan Sarun, Minister of Agriculture and myself. Through discussions, the private sector clearly understands that the private sector’s idea has already been implemented by the Royal Government and the Ministry of Agriculture. I, as a Co-Chair of the Agriculture and Agri-Industry Working Group, together with USAID and the International Finance Corporation, in collaboration with His Excellency Chan Sarun, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, have worked together to successfully solve the problem of importing pigs, which affected pig raising by domestic farmers.

These issues are important for private sector development in the Kingdom of Cambodia, for now and in the future.











Reared for take-off...

The first of 600 genetically-advanced breeding pigs were shipped to Cambodia in 2008 as part of a 20-year franchise agreement in a deal clinched by UK-based international pig-breeding company, ACMC Ltd. It is believed to be the first time ever that Cambodia has imported genetics from Britain. The initial order is worth almost $1.5 million.
ACMC’s special Meidam and Volante damlines and Vantage sirelines, plus boars representing all three breeds, were sent to a new unit specially set up on a five-hectare site to house a nucleus herd, in the Prey Nop district of Sihanoukville. This has been established by a new company — M’s Pig ACMC (Cambodia) Ltd — set up by the Mong Reththy Group.
The self-contained breeding unit — involving an investment of $5 million — will eventually supply enough commercial AC1 sows to produce 1.1 million slaughter pigs annually and will provide employment for thousands of people in rural areas. The project will also involve a feed-milling operation with a projected output of 330,000 tonnes a year and a slaughter/processing plant to produce ‘Premium Quality Pork’ for the Cambodian population, projected to grow from 14 million to 16 million by 2015.
Due to the complexity of the order, the stock had to be specially bred to provide the necessary blood-lines.
Cambodia, which currently imports around 2,000 pigs a day from neighbouring countries (principally Thailand) to meet domestic demand, is urgently seeking to increase indigenous output through an education project which aims to improve production methods and health standards together with the use of improved stock.
Interestingly, Cambodia will be importing genes, albeit much modified, originally sourced from the Far East. More than two decades ago the prolific Chinese Meishan was brought into Europe. Over a 20-year period ACMC used these genetics to create a new breed, the Meidam, to boost productivity. The Meidam is selected with 16 functioning teats and produces 15 per cent more milk than conventional European lines, enabling it to rear many more pigs. In Europe the AC1 has been shown to produce up to 30 pigs per sow a year.
By special licence the breeding stock was transhipped through Bangkok airport. The pigs’ arrival, seen by the media as a historical event, was attended by Neak Oknha Mong Reththy, CEO of the Mong Reththy Group, Stephen Curtis, chairman of ACMC, Steve Buckley director of investment from the UK Embassy and H.E. Sry Thamarong, of the Prime Minister of Cambodia’s office.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Overview

Approximately 80 percent of Cambodia’s population lives iCambodia Publicationn rural areas and 71 percent depend primarily on agriculture (largely rice) and livestock for their livelihoods.

HarvestPoverty in Cambodia is overwhelmingly rural, with poverty headcounts ranging from a low of 10-15 percent in Phnom Penh to 40-45 percent in the rural areas, reaching 70-80 percent in some areas around the Tonle Basin.The poorest are particularly dependent on access to common property resources - fisheries and forestry - for example, eating and selling fish, eating mushrooms, and selling logs.

Agricultural growth had shown steady improvement (although highly variable) averaging 2 percent annually over the decade prior to 2005, when the sector had unusually high growth of 16 percent. With workers in the sector also growing, sector value added on a per worker level was lower, achieving 19 percent growth over this same period.

However, agricultural production and general rural economic growth remain far below their potential because of low productivity, high vulnerability to weather, constrained access to land, forests, fisheries and markets, and lack of adequate infrastructure (such as roads, water supply, electricity and communications networks).

Given the large rural population and high potential for improvement, the government has highlighted promotion of agricultural development as the primary strategy for achieving higher growth and poverty reduction.

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