Title: POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT NEXUS STUDY PEN II CAMBODIA
1POVERTY AND ENVIRONMENT NEXUS STUDY (PEN II)-
CAMBODIA
- PRESETATION OF CASE STUDY FINDINGS
- (Poverty and Access to Natural Resources)
- By Chea Sarin
- Vientiane, Laos
- Date 21 June 2006
2The view expressed in this presentation is the
result from the case study and it is not
necessary to reflect the opinion of
agencies/authorities involved.
3Main Research Questions
- Access to natural resources to what extent do
the poor differ from the non-poor? - Trends in access to natural resources do trends
differ between poor and non-poor? - Differences in environmental impacts of natural
resource use by poor and non-poor? - Policy options leading to poverty reduction and
sustainable natural resource use?
4Key Natural Resource Access Issues
- Agricultural land
- Forest resources
- Grazing land
- Fisheries
- Drinking water
5Data collection methods
- Semi-structured interviews with government
officials (from village to provincial level) - Household survey 120 HHs total (20 HHs in each
village) - Focus group discussions to capture additional
information on wealth and gender differences (18
FGDs)
6Study Area and Key Characteristics
- Aoral district, Kampong Spue (3 villages)
- High pressure on remaining natural resources
- There is protected area called Aoral
- Land Area 2,331 sqm.
- Population density in 1998 6.5
- Percentage of poor 35.7
- Total forest cover as of total district land
89.2 - of people employed by agriculture, hunting and
forestry sector 88.6
7Study Area and Key Characteristics
- Santuk district, Kampong Thom (3 villages)
- Low pressure on natural resources
- There were 3 forest concession companies until
2003 and a protected area. - Land Area 2,823 sqm.
- Population density in 1998 20.6
- Percentage of poor 50.0
- Total forest cover as of total district land
58.8 - of people employed by agriculture, hunting and
forestry sector 84.5
8Case Study Findings Agricultural Land
- Gaining access and claim to land involves little
more than clearing it. - There are land seekers I.e. landless and
better-off newcomers - Newcomers hire local people to clear land for
agriculture and speculation - In some areas there is plenty access to land but
low or unproductive I.e. Aoral in-migrant was
given 3ha for each hhs. Due to unproductive land
people turn to make living in charcoal production - 25 of surveyed hhs reportedly landless and all
are poor and highly depend on access to natural
resources especially forest products - Respondents express concern that overexploitation
of resources may not sustain their livelihood in
the future - There is increasing of land ownership I.e.
average land holding in Santuk is 2.77ha for
non-poor compare to 0.73ha for poor hhs.
9Case Study Findings Forest Resources
- Forest resources decrease markedly over the past
several years I.e. timber, resins and wild animal
are declining dramatically - Low value products tend to have less extraction
pressure compare to the high value one I.e. wild
vegetable and vinery - Forest concession limited the access to forest
resources. Thus people became poorer. However, it
is even worse as forest resource become under FA
management I.e. people have to pay informal tax
or fee for charcoal product, what they collected
from forest or even take away from them - People found creative ways to collect timber to
avoid fees charge and confiscation I.e. cutting
up large log into smaller pieces or firewood or
construct a house for some period of time and
then sell it as salvage materials - Access to forest is further from year to year as
the surrounding forest was cut. There is second
cut of the surrounding forest and people express
concern that they may go for third cut the root
if they have no other option.
10Case Study Findings Gazing Land
- Grazing land is very important for draft animals
I.e. cattle and buffalo - 65 of surveyed hhs raised cattle and buffalo.
Poor hhs own fewer animals than non-poor hhs and
less value animals - There is open access to gazing land and it is
available in all surveyed villages. However, some
areas were reportedly decreased grazing land due
to conversion of land into cropland - Some hhs no longer need grazing land as they have
opted for machinery (koyun) to replace draft
animal
11Case Study Findings Fisheries
- It is chief of protein in rural diet and play
important role in rural livelihood - Although the surveyed villages are primarily
forest-dependent 75 of surveyed hhs benefit from
catching fish, frogs and other aquatic resources - Fish catch is primarily for daily consumption and
no restriction to access in the surveyed villages - It is reported that in the last 5 years fish
catch is declining due to overexploitation and
illegal use of destructive fish catch equipment
and methods.
12Case Study Findings Drinking Water
- Access to drinking water is open for both poor
and non-poor - Access to drinking water in some surveyed
villages is difficult due to long distance or
limited resources - In most of the case, respondents complain about
the quality of water. In Santuk most of hhs
collect water from wells but noted that the water
smells and bad tastes - In Aoral hhs collect water from different sources
but mainly from stream - Although respondents are aware that stream water
is not so clean they prefer to use it to water
from well because it is less or no smell and more
tasty. - Less than ¼ of hhs boil water for drink
- Hygienic practice is very low in both studied
areas. Most of hhs reported that they dont wash
hand before having meals.
13Poor Vs Non-poor and Access to NR
14Implications Poor vs. Non-Poor and NR Dependent
Livelihoods
Time
Poor subsistence or short-term gains Non-poor
larger short-term gains
Poor continuing poverty, return to poverty, or
alternative Non-poor alternative or possible
move into poverty
15Implications Poverty-Environment Relationships