Type | Conference Paper - 9th European IFSA Symposium |
Title | Building sustainable rural futures. Proceedings of the 9th European IFSA Symposium |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
City | Vienna |
Country/State | Austria |
URL | http://ifsa.boku.ac.at/cms/fileadmin/Proceeding2010/2010_WS5.3_Feike.pdf |
Abstract | Intercropping has a strong potential to slow down the severe degradation of arable land, many parts of China experienced in the last decades. Recent research findings proved the agronomic and environmental advantages of intercropping systems in the region. However the question remains whether this traditional production system fits the demands of modern agriculture and how it has to be adjusted to do so. To identify prevailing intercropping systems and understand farmers underlying motives and concepts a qualitative inquiry was conducted in the North China Plain. Furthermore farmers, extensionists, and researchers were interviewed on the future of intercropping. Additionally statistical data was consulted to understand current trends and future developments of the socio-economic and technical frame conditions. The investigations revealed that the limited off-farm income possibilities in rural China make intercropping a viable solution to intensively use the limited land resources of less than 0.5 hectare per farm household for income generation. However, a shift of rural laborers into the construction and industrial sector can be observed in recent years. Thus decreasing importance of income from agriculture and increasing labor costs are heralding the slow death of labor intensive intercropping systems. There is an urgent need to develop and disseminate systems that can be mechanized. We conclude that only an integrative research approach that includes all stakeholders is able to adjust the intercropping systems to future demands. Only systems that serve farmers’ requirements can considerably benefit the environment. |
» | China - Rural Household Survey 1995 |