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Master
Pays Bas
2020
Sustainable carbon farming and carbon credits business models for smallholder dairy cooperatives in emerging economies
Titre : Sustainable carbon farming and carbon credits business models for smallholder dairy cooperatives in emerging economies
Auteur : RUGWEGWE Olivier NGIRUMUVUGIZI
Université de soutenance : Van Hall Larenstein University of Applied Sciences
Grade : Master in Agricultural Production Chain Management (APCM). With specialisation in livestock chains. 2020
Résumé
The dairy sector in Kenya is one of the pillars for smallholder farmers’ livelihoods through the
generation of income, employment, and food to 2 million people across the dairy value chain although
the sector is still vulnerable to climate change. Agriterra stimulates climate-smart agriculture and
carbon farming to support farmers and their cooperatives to be resilient towards climate change by
focusing on enhanced productivity and increasing farmers cooperatives business model. Therefore,
Agriterra wanted to know the dairy-related carbon farming practices adopted by cooperative members
in Kenya and the business model of linking carbon farming practices to the carbon credits schemes for
the sustainable service provision and carbon farming adoption among cooperative members. This
research was carried out to advise Agriterra on the business model of integrating carbon farming
practices into carbon farming credits for dairy farmers in Kenya. To understand the concept of carbon
farming practices, related benefits, and the integration model to carbon credits schemes ; the study
employed literature review, online farmers survey, and online key-informants interviews.
The study highlighted that farming practices such as planting quality fodder, intercropping trees on
cropland or livestock, manure storage and producing biogas through bio-digesters have been practised
among dairy cooperatives farmers in Kenya and were backed by sciences to be the potential dairy
carbon farming practices in dairy. The study identified the existence of carbon credits schemes in Kenya
and the viability of integrating smallholder farmers’ carbon farming practices into carbon credits
schemes. The study determined that carbon credits dividends are almost insignificant to farmers, but
carbon farming practices have severe positive impacts on the ecosystem and farmers livelihood.
Page publiée le 6 décembre 2022