Type | Report |
Title | Potential and Acceptance of Energy Farming and Organic Fertilizer in Vientiane Municipality |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | http://library.wur.nl/ebooks/1885915.pdf |
Abstract | The potential for renewable energy is growing throughout Southeast Asia with interest in a range of technologies including PV Solar and bioenergy. The bioenergy sector in particular has shown considerable potential over the 1990s and early 2000s with investment by both state and large private entrepreneurs (Oosterveer et al. 2006). To meet the growing needs of small holder farmers in Southeast Asia biomass digestion, or energy farming holds energetic potential based on existing agricultural production. However, little is known about how willing or able farmers are to accept what could amount to considerable changes in production and livelihood practices. In addition, more information is needed on the status and role of organic fertilizer to determine the potential of waste re-use from the anaerobic digestion involved in energy conversion. To contribute to an empirically focused discussion on the potential of energy farming in Lao PDR this paper reports on the results of a study investigating the acceptance and viability of energy farming and organic fertiliser in urban and peri-urban communities of Vientiane Municipality. In doing so the survey assesses the potential of the renewable energy sector as part of wider study of Southeast Asia. The following results are based on two surveys: the first targeting farmers and the second fertilizer consumers and dealers. The three guiding questions for the surveys were: 1. What is the general acceptance of energy as a renewable energy strategy?; 2. What is the current use and future potential for organic fertilizer use?; and 3 What potential exists for collective forms of renewable development in urban and periurban Vientiane Municipality was selected for the survey as a starting point to understanding the potential of energy farming in the rest of the country. Given that energy farming is a new technology for farmers its acceptance in Vientiane Municipality acts as a ‘pilot study’ for its potential in the rest of the country. The report is divided into 4 sections. The following section provides an overview of existing knowledge on the organic fertilizer in Lao PDR and some basic statistics on agricultural production in Vientiane Municipality. This is followed by an outline of the methodology used for the two surveys in section 3. Section 4 focuses specifically on the results of the farmers survey, outlining the potential of crops, livestock and fertilizer use in Vientiane Municipality; Section 5 then focuses specifically on the perceptions of organic fertilizer before the potential and acceptance of renewable energy and, more specifically, energy farming are outlined in section 6. The final section then provides comments and recommendations on the outlook for energy farming in Vientiane and more widely in Lao PDR. |
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