Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco

Smallholders in southeastern Mexico face significant pedoclimatic constraints, including an uneven annual rainfall distribution and poorly workable soils. Consequently, they originally focused on extensive cattle rearing and food crops. Oil palm cultivation was introduced in the states of Campeche...

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Autores principales: Patault, Bertille, Penot, Eric, Michel, Isabelle, Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime, Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia, Feintrenie, Laurene
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2026
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/14219
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author Patault, Bertille
Penot, Eric
Michel, Isabelle
Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime
Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia
Feintrenie, Laurene
author_browse Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime
Feintrenie, Laurene
Michel, Isabelle
Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia
Patault, Bertille
Penot, Eric
author_facet Patault, Bertille
Penot, Eric
Michel, Isabelle
Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime
Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia
Feintrenie, Laurene
author_sort Patault, Bertille
collection Repositorio CATIE
description Smallholders in southeastern Mexico face significant pedoclimatic constraints, including an uneven annual rainfall distribution and poorly workable soils. Consequently, they originally focused on extensive cattle rearing and food crops. Oil palm cultivation was introduced in the states of Campeche and Tabasco in the late 1990s via a federal rural development programme targeting family farmers. This article examines how smallholders have adopted oil palm cultivation and assesses the economic impacts of this shift. Technical-economic surveys were conducted in these states involving 47 oil palm producers and 8 interested farmers. Coexisting with agro-industrial estates and large cattle farms in the process of diversification, we differentiated two main types of smallholders: those specialising in oil palm cultivation and larger producers (>50 ha) who diversified into oil palm while remaining cattle ranchers. Our results show that oil palm cultivation is economically more attractive than alternatives such as cattle rearing, maize cultivation or agricultural wage labour. The study area can be divided into three agroecological zones with varying palm oil production potentials, influencing technical practices and economic performance. We identified three types of oil palm cropping systems based on input and labour use: the “extensive”, the “intermediate”, and the “intensive” ones. In a context of volatile palm oil prices, our results indicate that the “intermediate” system yielded the highest labour and per-hectare productivity, in all agroecological zones. All smallholder oil palm farms generated high revenues and positive cash balances, enabling self-financed expansion of at least two hectares annually.
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spelling RepoCATIE142192026-01-10T23:55:32Z Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco Patault, Bertille Penot, Eric Michel, Isabelle Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia Feintrenie, Laurene agricultura familiar||family farming||agricultura familiar||agriculture familiale Pequeña explotación||small-scale farming||agricultura em pequena escala||petite agriculture Microeconomía||microeconomics||Microeconomia||microéconomie Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis México||Mexico||México (País)||Mexique Agricultural microeconomics Adaptive strategies Sede Central ODS 12 - Producción y consumo responsables Smallholders in southeastern Mexico face significant pedoclimatic constraints, including an uneven annual rainfall distribution and poorly workable soils. Consequently, they originally focused on extensive cattle rearing and food crops. Oil palm cultivation was introduced in the states of Campeche and Tabasco in the late 1990s via a federal rural development programme targeting family farmers. This article examines how smallholders have adopted oil palm cultivation and assesses the economic impacts of this shift. Technical-economic surveys were conducted in these states involving 47 oil palm producers and 8 interested farmers. Coexisting with agro-industrial estates and large cattle farms in the process of diversification, we differentiated two main types of smallholders: those specialising in oil palm cultivation and larger producers (>50 ha) who diversified into oil palm while remaining cattle ranchers. Our results show that oil palm cultivation is economically more attractive than alternatives such as cattle rearing, maize cultivation or agricultural wage labour. The study area can be divided into three agroecological zones with varying palm oil production potentials, influencing technical practices and economic performance. We identified three types of oil palm cropping systems based on input and labour use: the “extensive”, the “intermediate”, and the “intensive” ones. In a context of volatile palm oil prices, our results indicate that the “intermediate” system yielded the highest labour and per-hectare productivity, in all agroecological zones. All smallholder oil palm farms generated high revenues and positive cash balances, enabling self-financed expansion of at least two hectares annually. 2026-01-09T20:51:07Z 2026-01-09T20:51:07Z 2025-06-17 Artículo https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/14219 openAccess en Cahiers Agricultures https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2025019 12 páginas application/pdf
spellingShingle agricultura familiar||family farming||agricultura familiar||agriculture familiale
Pequeña explotación||small-scale farming||agricultura em pequena escala||petite agriculture
Microeconomía||microeconomics||Microeconomia||microéconomie
Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis
México||Mexico||México (País)||Mexique
Agricultural microeconomics
Adaptive strategies
Sede Central
ODS 12 - Producción y consumo responsables
Patault, Bertille
Penot, Eric
Michel, Isabelle
Cifuentes-Espinosa, Jaime
Monzón-Alvarado, Claudia
Feintrenie, Laurene
Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title_full Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title_fullStr Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title_short Diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern Mexican states of Campeche and Tabasco
title_sort diversity and profitability of oil palm smallholders in the southeastern mexican states of campeche and tabasco
topic agricultura familiar||family farming||agricultura familiar||agriculture familiale
Pequeña explotación||small-scale farming||agricultura em pequena escala||petite agriculture
Microeconomía||microeconomics||Microeconomia||microéconomie
Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis||Elaeis guineensis
México||Mexico||México (País)||Mexique
Agricultural microeconomics
Adaptive strategies
Sede Central
ODS 12 - Producción y consumo responsables
url https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/14219
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