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Showing posts with label Thailand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thailand. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 April 2019

Haze issue in Thailand


Haze: What to do about corn without killing the golden goose?

opinion April 15, 2019 19:44
By Michael Shafer

We have a big, known problem: Corn is a major source of Thailand’s chronic haze crisis. We also have a big, unknown problem: Corn is a link in a multibillion-dollar supply chain that is vital to Thailand and also many of its poorest people.  The really big problem, therefore, is not what to do about corn and corn’s contribution to the haze crisis.

The really big problem is how to fix corn without killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. Warm Heart Foundation believes it has a low-cost and immediately replicable solution. First, though, it would be useful to review the agricultural origins of the haze crisis.
Corn is nasty stuff. The way we cultivate it in Thailand is inexcusable, no question. Corn burning accounts for much of the Northern haze crisis. Just three Northern provinces, Chiang Rai, Nan and Tak, grow 1.67 million rai of corn – 24 per cent of the national total.) The haze kills and sickens tens of thousands; we all pay for their care.
What’s the corn problem?
Scale. Corn has gone from a regular part of the Thai diet to our biggest and fastest growing crop – that we cannot eat. It’s hog corn, 95 per cent of it unfit for human consumption. How did we get here? Demand for meat, milk and ice cream from a fast growing global and Thai middle class. Chickens, pigs and cows transform corn-based feed into drumsticks, steaks and Magnum bars very inefficiently.
 The cheapest places to grow – and the farmers most desperate to do it – are in the rural North where steep slopes and bad soil are good for nothing else. Laws protect such lands, but the officials charged with enforcement ignore burning forest for new fields because more is better. (In 2017-18, 3.67 million rai of corn – 52 per cent of Thailand’s total – grew in protected forest.) The government itself, with the Thai Animal Feed Association, encouraged rice farmers to plant corn as a second crop in their paddies, to “conserve water”.
What, then, is the problem?
The overwhelming expansion of corn on fragile soils in protected forests that are among the few remaining areas of biodiversity in Thailand. Monocropped corn generates huge pest pressure and demand for pesticides with lethal consequences. Corn itself is a particularly wasteful crop; only 22.2 per cent is kernel, while 78.2 per cent remains in the field to be cleared somehow before the next planting. (Burning is easiest, but since more than half of fields lie within forests, the forests burn, too.)
How do you “fix” this sick goose?
A recent article in The Nation highlights the work of leading Thai organisations that understand the problem and have wise solutions (“Thai govt urged to help farmers shift practices”, April 8). As BioThai director Withoon Lienchamroon observes, because just a few large companies, encouraged by government policies, are responsible, it ought to be possible to force a sustainable public-private solution to support integrated farming, not monocropping. Researcher Olarn Ongla adds that policy must also address farmers’ poverty, which prevents them from shifting to more sustainable techniques.
Sounds great – but despite the social costs of haze, neither government nor companies have incentives to play. Today, government and companies confront minimum costs and risks. Government has limited forest monitoring and use-enforcement costs or agricultural extension costs at the rural fringe. Elected with a popular majority, it can ignore protests in an opposition area. Doing nothing also avoids the risk of failure, dangerous when legitimacy depends on the ability to deliver quick, tangible successes. Meanwhile the companies face no risk of more costly corn, the largest cost component in animal production, and can use CSR programmes to placate opposition as they transition to foreign production
Killing the goose that lays the gold
What happens if such a scheme is imposed? The companies exit, with terrible consequences for Thailand. Companies produce corn in the Thai North because land and labour are cheap. If remaining in Thailand becomes too costly, they move to Myanmar. The growing conditions are similar, the labour is cheaper and there is no regulation. With the Asean Free Trade Agreement, the cost of importing corn to Thailand is minimal, although transportation is inconvenient. How best to solve that? Move the chickens, hogs and cattle to Myanmar along with the slaughterhouses, etc. The cost is soon paid back by the lower cost of doing business.
As a result, burning in Thailand, forest encroachment and the amount of corn raised decrease. We outsource the problem, but ineffectively. The haze continues from Myanmar, where tens of thousands more people are exposed. Closer to home, tens of thousands of Thais employed in the shipping, care, slaughter and processing of meats and dairy lose their jobs, a fate shared by large numbers of landless farmers. There are no ready replacement crops, sources of demand or funds. Rural communities collapse faster, more uneducated and untrained farmers pour into the cities. Thai imports of chicken, pork and beef spike. The goose is dead without an alternative source of gold ready at hand.
Does the goose have to die?
Warm Heart thinks not. We are small Thai Foundation (CM273) without the international and national funding of big NGOs. We do not make plans for government or for major corporations. We believe that corn is here to stay, essential to the lives of Thailand’s poorest farmers who are forgotten in public discussion. We see a way to resolve the haze crisis through the market and poor farmers’ hunger for better lives: give them incentives and means to profit from not burning their corn waste. Right now.
Warm Heart believes that we, the citizens of the North, can choose between two futures. The next decade can be clouded with haze or small farmers can learn to convert crop waste to biochar and sell it as briquettes or fertiliser.
There is nothing high-tech, high cost, imported or impressive about Warm Heart’s solution. We teach poor farmers to teach other poor farmers to make their own equipment and biochar. An old Thai farmer teaching another farmer to make biochar from crop waste in a small, unkempt field using equipment designed in Thailand and built by the farmer himself is not something that goes on nice websites or merits a write-up in academic journals. But it works. This is not a vague promise. This is not a theoretical possibility. This does not require years of testing. This is known and tested. If tens of thousands of small farmers learned to do this right now, there would be far less haze in the air next year.
Michael Shafer is director of the Warm Heart Foundation in Phrao, Chiang Mai.

Friday, 30 November 2018

Beyond the Trough - Thailand


"Lots of people expressed interest in the post-trough, post-Kontiki, tench solution to making char in the field without water. Here's a really simple, two minute video shot using our original test trench. In a few months when the corn harvest is in, I'll shoot a more real one up in the mountains. For now, this will have to serve. It is not, as you will see, rocket science, and as long as you dig the trench during the rainy season, there's not much work involved."
Dr Micheal Shafer

Check out the "flame cap' tag for other contributions...

Wednesday, 12 September 2018

Rice growing, biochar trial in Thailand

Gordon Hirst has sent me a link to a Facebook page that is recording a 5-year rice growing field trial in Thailand which includes biochar.
https://www.facebook.com/onetonperrai/

The page needs an introduction to set the scene but if you scroll to the start (3 July 2017), you can review progress via video posts and trial records...

"A field experiment using both a biochar fertilizer/ soil enhancement and SRI (system of rice intensification) to attempt to double the yield of a working farm, from 500 Kg/Rai to 1000 Kg/Rai. The farm is paddy rice farm located in Nakhon Ratchasima province ten Rai (1.6 Ha). The experiment will last for five years"

Friday, 7 September 2018

Biochar social enterprise in Thailand (part 3 of 5)

Cool the Climate, Clean the Environment, Improve Public Health, Reduce Rural Poverty with Small-Scale Biochar - Part 3

President, Board of Directors at Warm Heart Worldwide, Inc. 14 articles

Sows’ Ears into Silk Purses

On Sun, Sep 2, 2018 at 8:42 PM 'd.michael.shafer@gmail.com' d.michael.shafer@gmail.com [biochar] <biochar@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
  Here is the 3rd article in the 5 part series, this one focused on how a small-scale biochar social enterprise business model can (and does) work.

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/cool-climate-clean-environment-improve-public-health-reduce-shafer-2d/

For those of you who are frustrated with the drip feeding of articles, this link will take you to a downloadable PDF of all five:   https://warmheartworldwide.org/cool-the-climate-pdf/ 

Tuesday, 28 August 2018

SEA Haze issue: article Part 2 of 5

Here is part 2 of Michael Shafer's 5-part series. Part 1 can be found by scrolling down...


Cool the Climate, Clean the Environment, Improve Public Health, Reduce Rural Poverty with Small-Scale Biochar - Part 2


President, Board of Directors at Warm Heart Worldwide, Inc. 12 articles

Thursday, 23 August 2018

Crop residue burning in Thailand - WarmHeart (part 1of 5)

Dr Michael Shafer's work with biochar from his 'WarmHeart' base in northern Thailand is well reported here (see WarmHeart tag). Michael is kicking off a 5-part report focused on crop residue burning. Below is his announcement on this to the yahoo international biochar discussion group. It is a highly relevant read for those of us interested in solving regional haze issues.
d.michael.shafer@gmail.com
Aug 21 3:04 AM
"I live in North Thailand where smoke from burning  corn and rice fields blocks the sun a couple of months a year. Burning wheat straw smoke closes Delhi every year, too.

Because most of the farmers who burn are poor and small, collecting their crop waste for central processing is uneconomical and their fields are too small, too steep, too rocky to plow, even if they could afford a tractor.

They are so poor, however, that converting their crop waste to biochar makes lots of sense. Establishing village-scale social enterprises to process local biochar into value added products is also not only appealing to farmers but a replicable way to solve the crop waste burning problem where it starts - in small farmers' fields.

This is the first of a five part series in which I make the case for a small-scale biochar social enterprise business model for addressing the problem. The remaining four will appear over the next few weeks.


I would welcome any comments, suggestions, corrections or criticisms."


photo
Dr. D. Michael Shafer
Founder and Director, Warm Heart
61 M.8 T.Maepang A.Phrao 50190 Chiang Mai Thailand

Friday, 13 July 2018

Biochar activities in Thailand

Dennis Enright is a kiwi who travels to Thailand regularly to work with NGO's on biochar and sustainable farming practices. We have collaborated on biochar development in NZ which has included running biochar training workshops in May/June. We also hope to soon collaborate on biochar projects in SEA with other regional NGO's and consultants.

The following report from Dennis is just one of a number of projects he is working on in Thailand. Others include coffee growers and coconut farmers... reports on these projects in the pipeline.

You can Contact Dennis from his NZ website: http://nzbiocharltd.co.nz/

Making Biochar from Mulberry Prunings at Khon Kaen, Thailand – June 29th 2018

Dennis Enright (NZ Biochar Ltd)

Mulberry bushes are grown to produce mulberry leaf tea (and for silk worms). During the growing period leaves are regularly picked from the stems and by the end of the growing season most stems are bare of leaves and are about 2-3 metres high. At this time the stems are cut off at about 10 cm from the base, removed, and stacked in piles around the edges of the field until they are dry and can be burnt. The mulberry plant then produces new shoots and the annual cycle continues.


In June of this year GreenNet Cooperative staff and I visited Ban Hin Herb village (Tambon Prayuen, Prayuen District, Khon Kaen) where we used a metal lined Kon-tiki pit kiln to make biochar from Mulberry bush prunings, and then applied some of this biochar to mulberry plants in a simple experiment to evaluate the effects.

I chose a lined Kon-tiki method because on a previous occasion where biochar was made using damp coconut material in a flat bottomed concrete tub, not all the material charred well. This probably happened because in a container with a large flat bottom it is difficult to get a good base of hot char below the newly applied material to help dry it before more charring occurs.

The Kon-tiki pit liner was made at the village using light gauge sheet metal held into shape with wire, both bought locally and costing less than 500 bt in total.

Making biochar with the lined Kon-tiki worked well, even though the prunings were still partially green (about one month old), and the weather was very humid and for a short time near the start of making biochar it rained quite heavily (see photo).

So while there may be other containers that can work, this is the most effective way to make biochar (refer to research work of Schmidt H P and Taylor P)

Also mulberry prunings were easily turned into biochar that was quite soft and had a very noticeable soapy feel to it.

Some of this biochar was then primed with a slurry of chicken manure/rice husks and used in an experiment. The treatments were; 5 litres of primed biochar per plant (place in a circle - diameter of 30 cm), and 5 litres of chicken slurry only.

These treatments were applied to plants in a single row in the following order starting at plant 7 from the road side:

Plant 7 primed biochar, plant 8 no treatment, plant 9 chicken slurry, plant 10 no treatment, Plant 11 primed biochar, plant 12 no treatment, plant 13 chicken slurry, plant 14 no treatment, Plant 15 primed biochar, plant 16 no treatment, plant 17 chicken slurry, plant 18 no treatment (see photos)

The soil here is sand with very low amounts of organic matter. This experiment is situated on an organic farm and we are interested in determining if biochar can increase the effectiveness of nutrients applied in the usual organic fertilisers such as compost that the farmers apply. If treatment effects become apparent, then assessments can be done using a scientifically acceptable visual scoring procedure and the results statistically analysed.

Friday, 24 November 2017

Dennis Enright discusses biochar in Thailand

Biochar for small farm productivity – with guest Dennis Enright | Eco Living in Action

We go all the way to NZ to hear from Dennis and his biochar work in Thailand. This is closely linked to WarmHeart as well. A search here on the WarmHeart or Thailand tag will find more on this.

Tuesday, 30 May 2017

Regional biochar training program?

Is there an opportunity here for a regional biochar training program.
This could bring expertise to support local biochar supporters, groups or NGO's.
It should also be a great opportunity for mature CHAB technology demonstration projects.
Your feedback / ideas welcome.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: EEP Mekong Programme <rcu@eepmekong.org>
Date: 29 May 2017 at 16:52
Subject: NEW CALL-FOR-PROPOSAL CFP-8 EEP MEKONG PROGRAMME
To: febiochar@gmail.com



NEW    CALL-FOR-PROPSALS - CFP-8
                EEP Mekong Programme

 

The Energy and Environment Partnership Programme with theMekong Region - EEP Mekong, funded by the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, aims to improve access to sustainable energy in the EEP Mekong partner countries Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam.
This Call-for-Proposals (CfP-8) is aiming at both Civil Society Organizations (CSO) and private sector companies in clean energy to propose projects.  CSO can propose pilot projects on a smaller scale whereas private sector projects should be close to commercial maturity and have potential for scaling-up.
Minimum project value for both applications (CSO and private sector) is Euro 250,000. CSO projects can be funded (grant) of up to 60% of project value.
Private sector projects can receive project grant support of up to Euro 1,000,000 depending on the project size and the level of verifiable self-financing of the project developer.
EEP Mekong is inviting CfP applications in only one step as Full Project Proposals.

To be eligible, projects have to be implemented in one or more of the EEP Mekong partner countries - Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. The programme developers have to be registered in one or more of the above partner countries or Finland.
Interested project developers are requested to submit their Project proposal online through the link provided at EEP Mekong websitewww.eepmekong.org on or before 30 June 2017, at 16:00 hrs,Vientiane time.
For detailed information about EEP Mekong programme and how to apply for project funding (CfP-8), please visit www.eepmekong.org
or contact
Bernhard Meyhöfer, Programme Manager   bernhard.meyhofer@eepmekong.org
or
Cosme de Arana, Business Development Expert cosme.arana@eepmekong.org

Saturday, 1 April 2017

Climate change, developed world v. developing world and biochar

Climate change, developed world v. developing world and biochar [link to article]

Dr. D. Michael Shafer

Director, Warm Heart Foundation, A.Phrao, Chiang Mai

"Because we are among the world’s 1.2 billion rich people and not its 5.4 billion poor, it is easy to think about the climate crisis, solutions to the climate crisis and sustainability in terms of developed world actions and initiatives. Given the focus of diplomatic, media, policy, and scientific attention, this is entirely understandable. It is also entirely wrongheaded. If you ask, Where can we most easily improve environmental outcomes? Achieve sustainability? Reverse climate change? To say nothing of where can we alleviate the most suffering and promote the greatest good? The answers are all found in the developing world. Environmental action in the developing world by and for the 2.54 billion of the world’s poorest people, very small farmers, can do more right now and at less cost to advance our shared interest in global sustainability than anything else imaginable.

What is to be done? Train billions of small farmers in the developing world to turn their crop wastes into biochar instead of burning it. ..."

Conclusion

"The conclusions that follow from this extended argument should be encouraging for the developed world reader not attempting to commercialize biochar. Stated a boldly as possible: (1) Because the climate change calamity falls largely on the developing world, it must mobilize to solve the problem, not merely postpone it. (2) Unlike the developed world, where much depends on intergovernmental and even inter-nongovernmental organization coordination – a huge task – the remedy required in the developing world requires no coordination and little government action. (3) Developed world efforts to reverse climate change are nascent and decades from ramp up, the technology and project required to remove billions of tons of CO 2 from the atmosphere is ready and waiting in developing world. (4) The developed world winces at the cost of development assistance, but two critical details recommend the proposed program: it clearly serves the interest of the developed world and it will reduce future spending on such financial black hole programs as health and food aid. (5) Finally, because the proposed program works by creating incentives for the world’s poorest to help themselves, it is an investment in reducing climate change’s most salient political challenge: how to manage the hordes of hunger refugees who will storm the borders of the developed world?"

Monday, 13 March 2017

Thailand biochar workshop report

Warm Heart Biochar Workshop - Phrao, Northern Thailand

Here is a link to a short report on the workshop. Please get in touch if you are interested in organising biochar workshops in your area.
Displaying IMG_20170219_172717.jpg
Foreground: TFOD trough for bamboo biochar production

Sunday, 26 February 2017

Michael waves the black flag via Eco-business.com


Can biochar make climate change a profitable business opportunity?

In a world frozen in a futile debate on climate change, can we break the ice with win-win, sustainable solutions like biochar? Michael Shafer from NGO Warm Heart Worldwide thinks we can.



http://www.eco-business.com/opinion/can-biochar-make-climate-change-a-profitable-business-opportunity/



Friday, 20 January 2017

Thailand workshop 18-20 February


Dates have now been fixed for the biochar workshop at Warm Heart.

Check out their Environmental Program here...
http://warmheartworldwide.org/biochar-research-environment/
A fantastic setting to learn about biochar.

Here is a link to the latest workshop flyer. Do get into touch with me or Evelind if you want to make a booking. Numbers are limited to about 15 and transport planning needs to be coordinated so please make contact soon if you are interested in finding out more on this.