When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam

Rice farmers in the Mekong Delta are not only experiencing challenges due to climate change but are also expected to increase production through sustainable intensification. Increased production and mechanization, such as using combine harvesters leave farmers with more rice straw in the field, whic...

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Autores principales: Connor, Melanie, Guia, Annalyn H. de, Quilloy, Reianne, Hung Van Nguyen, Gummert, Martin, Sander, Björn Ole
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108335
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author Connor, Melanie
Guia, Annalyn H. de
Quilloy, Reianne
Hung Van Nguyen
Gummert, Martin
Sander, Björn Ole
author_browse Connor, Melanie
Guia, Annalyn H. de
Gummert, Martin
Hung Van Nguyen
Quilloy, Reianne
Sander, Björn Ole
author_facet Connor, Melanie
Guia, Annalyn H. de
Quilloy, Reianne
Hung Van Nguyen
Gummert, Martin
Sander, Björn Ole
author_sort Connor, Melanie
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rice farmers in the Mekong Delta are not only experiencing challenges due to climate change but are also expected to increase production through sustainable intensification. Increased production and mechanization, such as using combine harvesters leave farmers with more rice straw in the field, which farmers often choose to burn resulting in adverse health effects, increased air pollution and increased greenhouse gas emissions. Farmer adoption of recently promoted sustainable rice straw management practices is low. The present study, therefore, investigated factors influencing the acceptance of different rice straw management practices. 111 smallholder rice farmers participated in the study. Farmers’ perceptions of risks, benefits and their acceptance of eight different rice straw management practices including burning, soil incorporation, composting, mushroom and biogas production, and different collection methods, was investigated via a survey questionnaire. Results show that farmers often burn their rice straw even though they perceive high risks, few benefits and expressed low levels of acceptance for rice straw burning. Acceptance of rice straw management practices differs between practices; however, benefit perceptions are the strongest predictor for all practices followed by knowledge about climate change. Risk perceptions were a weak predictor for some practices including burning and biogas production. The regression models explain up to 50% of the variance. Results show that the experiential system determines farmers’ perception of practiced straw management options. This study also shows that even though climate change is not psychologically distant to farmers, sustainable behavior will depend on the acceptability, feasibility and perceived benefit of options provided.
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spelling CGSpace1083352025-02-19T13:42:02Z When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam Connor, Melanie Guia, Annalyn H. de Quilloy, Reianne Hung Van Nguyen Gummert, Martin Sander, Björn Ole climate change agriculture food security sustainable agriculture rice development Rice farmers in the Mekong Delta are not only experiencing challenges due to climate change but are also expected to increase production through sustainable intensification. Increased production and mechanization, such as using combine harvesters leave farmers with more rice straw in the field, which farmers often choose to burn resulting in adverse health effects, increased air pollution and increased greenhouse gas emissions. Farmer adoption of recently promoted sustainable rice straw management practices is low. The present study, therefore, investigated factors influencing the acceptance of different rice straw management practices. 111 smallholder rice farmers participated in the study. Farmers’ perceptions of risks, benefits and their acceptance of eight different rice straw management practices including burning, soil incorporation, composting, mushroom and biogas production, and different collection methods, was investigated via a survey questionnaire. Results show that farmers often burn their rice straw even though they perceive high risks, few benefits and expressed low levels of acceptance for rice straw burning. Acceptance of rice straw management practices differs between practices; however, benefit perceptions are the strongest predictor for all practices followed by knowledge about climate change. Risk perceptions were a weak predictor for some practices including burning and biogas production. The regression models explain up to 50% of the variance. Results show that the experiential system determines farmers’ perception of practiced straw management options. This study also shows that even though climate change is not psychologically distant to farmers, sustainable behavior will depend on the acceptability, feasibility and perceived benefit of options provided. 2020-06 2020-05-27T12:48:11Z 2020-05-27T12:48:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108335 en Open Access Elsevier Connor M, de Guia AH, Quilloy R, Nguyen HV, Gummert M, Sander BO. 2020. When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam. World Development Perspectives 18:100204.
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
sustainable agriculture
rice
development
Connor, Melanie
Guia, Annalyn H. de
Quilloy, Reianne
Hung Van Nguyen
Gummert, Martin
Sander, Björn Ole
When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title_full When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title_fullStr When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title_short When climate change is not psychologically distant – Factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the Mekong river Delta of Vietnam
title_sort when climate change is not psychologically distant factors influencing the acceptance of sustainable farming practices in the mekong river delta of vietnam
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
sustainable agriculture
rice
development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/108335
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