Presenting the five winners of the
2005 Seed Awards:
2007 Award Winners
Applying for an award
Cambodia, Madagascar and Sir Lanka: Environmentally-Friendly
Rice (aka A Global
Marketing Partnerships for SRI Indigenous Rice)
Farmers in Asia and East Africa
are partners in an initiative to boost rural incomes
through the marketing of indigenous and environmentally-friendly
grown rice varieties. Commercial rice cultivation
in the developing world is becoming increasingly questionable
as a result of low market prices and the financial and
environmental costs of using chemicals and fertilizers.
Conventional methods of rice production are also extremely
water intensive.
Some farmers in Cambodia, Madagascar
and Sir Lanka have turned to a production method known
as the ‘System of Rice Intensification’
or SRI. It involves an a la carte menu of actions including
when to plant out Seedlings, weeding regimes
and the spacing of plants, which can be adapted to local
conditions and indigenous rice varieties.
Small rural producers who are taking
part are achieving water savings of up to 50 per cent
and increased yields of up to 100 per cent. This is
because SRI, a collaborative effort between Cornell
University, several non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
and local communities, works without flooding rice paddies
and results in stronger plants that need less chemical
fertilizers and pesticides.
Rice produced in this way commands
higher prices. The trick is to empower and assist producers
to exploit and benefit from these premium prices in
local and international markets. This new project, which
has brought together research institutes from the United
States and Cambodia and farmers organizations, is pooling
experiences and skills to develop strong marketing programmes.
Export markets in Europe and North America are also
being explored using, in some cases, certification schemes
like Fair Trade.
The Seed Award for this
winning partnership is generously sponsored by Swiss
Re, Switzerland.
• Further information
Himalayas Harvesting Seabuckthorn at the top of the
world

Seabuckthorn is a deciduous shrub
that is common in the Himalayas. It has a highly developed
root system that binds soils on fragile slopes. The
presence of a natural seabuckthorn ‘forest’
can decrease monsoon-related loss of topsoil by 30 percent.
The plant also has a wide range of commercial applications
which are beginning to be exploited by commercial companies
in countries like India.
The berries are highly nutritious
and yield juice, as well as oils for cosmetics and traditional
medicines. The leaves are also used in traditional medicines,
as well as for livestock fodder, and the branches can
be used for firewood.
The international HimalAsia Foundation
together with local Tibetan cooperatives and a family
of traditional medical practitioners are developing
a sustainable programme for cultivating and marketing
seabuckthorn and other medicinal plants for the local
and international market. In doing so, they
are not only developing sustainable livelihoods for
local people, but playing an important role in conserving
biodiversity in this Himalayan mountain area.
Plans for the future include expanding
on three existing seabuckthorn nurseries, training locals
in the extraction and preparation of juice and helping
to broker fair business relationships between international
companies and local communities.
• Further
information
Madagascar's first experimental community-run marine
protected area

An estimated 11.5 per cent of the
Earth’s land surface is now held in protected
areas but only about one half per cent of the world’s
seas and oceans enjoy the same rights.
The 2002 World Summit on Sustainable
Development’s Plan of Implementation called for
the establishment of representative network of Marine
Protected Areas (MPAs). An experimental, community-led,
scheme in Madagascar aims to be one of these light-houses
by illuminating how partnerships between local
people, research institutes and NGOs can deliver marine
conservation and sustainable livelihoods.
The project, focused around the
1200-strong community of Andavadoaka, is balancing the
needs of local fishermen and protection of the area’s
important coral reefs. Eco-tourism is being promoted
as a way of generating income for conservation work,
diversifying the local economy and to reduce the pressure
on fish stocks.
It is hoped that the experiences
from this project will act as a blueprint for similar
projects in other regions.
• Further
information
Bolivia: Water for All
Relevant websites: http://www.aguatuya.com
Access to clean water is an emotive
issue in developing countries and sometimes leads to
civil unrest and major social problems. The Millennium
Development Goals call for a halving of the level of
people without access to fresh water and sanitation
and this project directly addresses this aim.
The 'Agua Para Todos' initiative
in Bolivia has found a way of solving the seemingly
intractable problem of who pays for secondary water
networks, i.e. delivering water from the municipal supplier's
main pipe to the consumer.
Under the project, a consortium
of local communities, an NGO and a pipe manufacturer
is building water distribution systems in coordination
with the municipal water company in Cochabamba,
each connecting between 100 and 500 poor households.
The costs are being met by the communities
concerned through a micro credit scheme, repayable within
a year.
Five pilot projects are under way,
already halving the cost of water for 3,000 people in
Cochabamba. Ambitious plans currently under development
in partnership with the municipal government would provide
17,000 connections serving 85,000 people over the next
five years.
•
Further
information
Nigeria: Cows to Kilowatts
Effluents and waste products from
abattoirs are a problem for human health and the environment
across the developing world.
A project being piloted in Ibadan,
Nigeria, is turning these wastes into energy
to generate income for poor urban communities and reduce
the gases linked with climate change.
The project treats the abattoir
wastes and turns them into a ‘bio-gas’ suitable
for cooking and other uses. A further by-product is
agricultural-grade fertilizer.
The partnership behind the project
claims their bio-gas is significantly cheaper than current,
commercially available, liquefied gases. The scheme
will cover its costs and become profitable in three
years and has a fifteen year life expectancy.
• Further information
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2005 Award Winners
Applying for an award