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Changing Great Lakes of the World and Rift Valley Lakes: Sustainability, Integrity and Management

Combining biodiversity conservation with poverty alleviation - a case study in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

Pages 41-46 | Published online: 12 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

In many developing countries there is a prevailing conflict between biodiversity conservation and the need for poverty alleviation. One possible solution for solving that conflict is to find ways that help poor people directly benefit from conservation activities. This approach has been tested in a wetland conservation project in Phu My village, Kien Luong District, Kien Giang Province in Vietnam. The 2,000-hectare seasonally inundated grassland, dominated by the sedge Lepironia articulata (Cyperaceae), in Phu My Village is the last of its kind remaining in the Mekong Delta. In November 2004, a new model of protected area was therefore established. Unlike other protected areas in Vietnam where resource exploitation is prohibited, this is an “open” protected area in the sense that the local Khmer ethnic minority people are still allowed to harvest Lepironia as they have been doing for hundreds of years. The project provides local people with skills training and production equipment so that they can make fine handicrafts from the Lepironia they harvest. The project also helps with marketing handicraft products to higher profitable export markets. After three years of operating, the daily income of people who participated was on average twice as much as it was before the project began. The unique remnant wetland is protected, which would otherwise have been turned into a rice cultivation area according to the previous land use planning of Kien Giang Province.

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank the World Bank's Development Marketplace Program, International Finance Corporation, Holcim Vietnam Limited Company, UN-HABITAT and City of Dubai – United Arab Emirates for providing funds for the implementation of Phu My project. We are thankful to Vietnam National University in Ho Chi Minh City, Can Tho University and the International Crane Foundation for providing technical assistance. Kien Giang and Phu My authorities are acknowledged for their partnership in the management of the Phu My project. The author would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions, which greatly improved the manuscript.

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