Nature-based solutions for climate risks in Vietnam’s Central Highlands
This project focuses on creating more climate-resilient food systems in the Central Highlands—one of Vietnam’s poorest, yet most agriculturally important regions. Across the region, intensive irrigation combined with climate change threatens water security and livelihoods of smallholder farmers who largely produce coffee. Ethnic minority groups are most at risk. An innovative, nature-based solution known as Managed Aquifer Recharge (MAR) was previously demonstrated to be effective at the pilot scale in the Central Highlands in building preparedness to climate change by increasing water availability and maintaining productivity. Through the piloting project, MAR received in-principal endorsement from the government and the Vietnam coffee sector. Building on this initial success, this project will involve the implementation of a cluster of approximately twenty-five new MAR interventions to be co-designed and implemented with farmers. IWMI and partners will also engage with government agencies and the private sector to strengthen the enabling environment to promote public and private investment into scaling MAR as an approach to mitigate water-related climate risks for agricultural production.
Photo: Mathieu Viossanges
Germany's Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMUV)
WASI
Paul Pavelic
availability and allocation of water, capacity building, Climate change, ecosystem, education, groundwater, irrigation, water storage
Enabling smallholder farmers to better manage water-related climate risks in the Central Highlands of Vietnam with novel nature-based solutions. (Proj-ID-045)