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  • 2005
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2005
    Topic: 
    Tourism
    Pages: 
    5
  • 2010

     In Vietnam over two million families have piggeries that create a huge odour and waste problem. The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) has partnered with the Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV) to develop a nation wide biogas programme, which is turning Vietnam’s waste problem into a source of clean energy.

    This case study from the Ashden Award recognises to MARD and SNV their successful partnership which has enabled the large scale dissemination of domestic biogas technology to improve the quality of life for farmers in Vietnam. Chapters include:

    1. Background

    • The organisation
    • The technology
    • The technology in more detail
    • How does it work?
    • How much does it cost and how do users pay?
    • How is it manufactured, promoted and maintained?

    2. Benefits

    • Environmental benefits
    • Social benefits
    • Economic and employment benefits

    3. Potential for growth and replication
    4. Contact details

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Renewable energy
    Sub-sector: 
    Domestic biogas
    Subject: 
    Programme management
    Author: 
    n/a
    Publisher: 
    Ashden Awards
    Pages: 
    4
  • 2005
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2005
    Topic: 
    Tourism
    Pages: 
    6
  • 2010
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Topic: 
    Tourism
    Author: 
    Paul Rogers and Phil Harman
    Pages: 
    5
  • 2009
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2009
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Renewable energy
    Pages: 
    5
  • 2009

    The Vietnamese government has recognised the need for development of alternative energy to substitute its dependency on fossil fuels and has developed a vision and strategy on biofuels. Part of this is to recover so called waste lands (degraded or low-fertile) through the production of Jatropha oil seeds. This has the potential to bring a stable income for tens of thousands of rural farmers, especially in the coastal areas of central and southern Vietnam.

    Green Energy Vietnam (GEV) started with the cultivation of Jatropha on infertile lands in Ninh Thuan, Quang Tri and Thua Thien Hue provinces. GEV approached SNV to support them in the development and set-up of a new company business model through which they can secure feedstock production from smallholder farmers. Leading in this business model will be to adhere to international sustainability guidelines as they are currently being developed by the Roundtable for Sustainable Biofuels. Essential elements here: access to land for smallholders and social and environmental sustainability.

    SNV provides direct advisory to the company, reviewing and commenting their farmer contract systems, improving their farmer extension materials etc. SNV, in collaboration with local capacity builders also provides training services on agricultural extension for company staff and group leaders.

    The case study addresses that it's difficult to talk about impact at this stage, but potential impacts for smallholders who can produce Jatropha are mentioned as well as some lessons learned.

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2009
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Renewable energy
    Sub-sector: 
    Biofuels
    Subject: 
    Programme management
    Author: 
    Janssen, N.
    Publisher: 
    SNV
    Pages: 
    5
  • 2012

    LCDF Case Study: KCT Thai Binh (Vietnam)

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2012
    Topic: 
    Local Capacity Development Facility
    Author: 
    SNV Corporate
  • 2010

    Cassava is a cash crop that grows predominantly in upland areas of Vietnam with low soil fertility and high poverty rates among farmers. SNV is implementing a project in the north-central region of Vietnam, in which some 10,000 farmers in a cassava growing area have successfully become business partners with starch factories. In this project, the factories are the anchor companies in inclusive business models, taking the lead in the formation of farmer groups and entering into long-term profitable business agreements for a regular input supply. Promotion of sustainable production such as intensive cultivation, soil  erosion prevention and staggered cropping is based on the development of know-how within the anchor company as well as with locally operating service providers. SNV leads the process, ensuring the replicability of sustainable services for farmers within and beyond the scope of the project. The inclusive business approach of the programme takes the medium and large enterprises as the entry point for engaging the poor. Investment, commitment and good governance is required from these enterprises to ensure the sustainability of the model.

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Agriculture
    Sub-sector: 
    Staple food crops
    Topic: 
    Market Access
    Author: 
    Ton That Minh Khanh
    Publisher: 
    SNV Vietnam
    Pages: 
    3
  • 2012

    Ethnic minority farmers located on the hillsides of North-Central Vietnam are being offered opportunities to improve their livelihoods and incomes in a sustainable way, by working together with cassava processing enterprises who want to develop cassava in an environmentally sound manner. With a grant from the Ford Foundation this value chain improvement project affected an estimated 10,000 households during the 2008-2011 period: increasing average incomes by more than 20% with additional improvements in environmental sustainability of growing practices as well as increased reliability in business relations. The companies also benefited from increased supply of cassava of higher quality. The scaling-up of the project to include 200,000 farmers is now being explored via possible collaboration between IFAD, CIAT and actors in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The potential for collaboration between farmers and processors is enormous in Vietnam and neighbouring countries as cassava is rapidly becoming a major commodity, with hundreds of thousands of smallholders supplying products to processing enterprises.

    See also: Inclusive Business at SNV

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2012
    Region: 
    Asia, World
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Agriculture
    Service: 
    Inclusive Business
    Value Chain Development
    Topic: 
    Inclusive Business
    Author: 
    Nico Janssen
    Publisher: 
    SNV
  • 2010
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Water, Sanitation & Hygiene
    Author: 
    Gabrielle Halcrow
    Pages: 
    56
  • 2004
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2004
    Pages: 
    5
  • 2010
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Agriculture
    Author: 
    Le Anh Tuan
    Pages: 
    50
  • 2004
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2004
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Agriculture
    Author: 
    Nico Janssen
    Pages: 
    4
  • 2010
    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2010
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Agriculture
    Pages: 
    2
  • 2009

    Vietnam is characterised by having millions of hectares of marginal or less-productive lands available for sustainable production of biofuels feedstock. Green Energy Vietnam (GEV) is a for-profit company running a business in Jatropha cultivation (in 2009, approximate total of 2,000 ha), thereby contracting Vietnamese farmer's cooperatives and unions to secure large amounts of feedstock production. GEV processes the biomass for domestic and World sale. The cooperatives and unions are contracted for the long-term (30 years), contributing to a sustainable income for farming households. Besides contracting, GEV is active on household level, training them in feedstock production, as well as institutional level, developing appropriate policies and implementation mechanisms for contract farming modalities.

    Since 2008, GEV has sought the advisory services from SNV in jointly building the capacity of the farmer cooperatives and unions in the management of the contract farming system. A model, which helps to secure feedstock production by smallholders for GEV, is being developed according to the international sustainability guidelines adopted by the Roundtable for Sustainable Biofuels (RSB). SNV, via local organisations, provides training services on agricultural extension for company staff and group leaders. Lastly, SNV advices on the applicability of carbon credits for parts of GEV's operation in line with the Kyoto protocol. With the advisory support of SNV, GEV will have, by the end of 2010, introduced a smallholder business model for Jatropha farming to around 10,000 households in three provinces (Ninh Thuan, Quang Tri and Thua Thien Hue) with a functioning professional support network and applied research station.

    Type: 
    Case study
    Language: 
    English
    Year: 
    2009
    Region: 
    Asia
    Country: 
    Vietnam
    Sector: 
    Renewable energy
    Sub-sector: 
    Biofuels
    Subject: 
    Programme management
    Author: 
    Hadden, J. & N. Janssen
    Publisher: 
    Green Energy Vietnam and SNV
    Pages: 
    5
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