urban agriculture in naga city: growing food, growing partnerships, growing naga

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Presentation of the University of British Columbia (UBC) Urban Agriculture Group on June 6, 2007 at the Bicol Science and Technology Centrum, Naga City, in conjunction with their Naga Planning Studio Course.

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Urban Agriculture in Naga City

“Growing Food, Growing Partnerships,

Growing Naga”

Wednesday June 6th, 2007

PLAN 548H: Naga City Planning Studio Course Final Presentation

Kathryn Hill Kaitlin Kazmierowski Dee Dee Quinnelly

“Food like no other commodity, allows for a political reawakening, as it touches our lives in so many ways…from the

intimacy of breastfeeding to discussions at the

World Trade Organization”-Welsh and MacRae, 1998

Presentation OutlineThe Naga Context

Project Goal

Benefits of Urban Agriculture

Program Components

Recommendations

Conclusions

The Naga Context• Agricultural activity is concentrated in 11 of

27 barangays

• 65.78% of Naga’s total land area is devoted to agriculture

• In 1999 alone, 1660 ha were converted from agricultural uses

• Rice, sugarcane, coconut and corn are the main crops produced

• Current UA ordinances are prohibitive

• Production pressures are changing the face of agriculture

The Naga Context

The Project Goal...

To develop and promote UA in Naga City as a viable livelihood option to enhance agricultural productivity and conserve

lands critical for sustainable food security

Why Urban Agriculture? The Benefits of a Holistic Approach

• Food Security

• Income Generation

• Environmental Sustainability

• Community Links

• Growth Management

• Empowerment

Program Components

Research and Development

Education, Training and Extension

Marketing and Finance

Land Use Planning &Management

Research and DevelopmentResearch and development feeds

agricultural sustainability

• Baseline data

• Technology development

Research and Development: Key Findings in Naga

Opportunities

• Technology development focus

• Socio-economic & environmental assessments

Constraints

• Geographically-restricted data

• Lack of databases & GIS implementation

• Minimal farmer participation

Research and Development: Recommendations

• Comprehensive community assessments

• Create databases and incorporate GIS

• Collaborate with research institutions

• Adopt participatory technology development

• Focus on “urban-specific” technologies

Education, Training and Extension

Education in the foundation upon which collaboration and action flourish

Farmer: Sustainable Agriculture, Political know-how

Public: Holism, Schools, Universities and Popular Education

Planner: UA Benefits, Facilitation

Politician: UA Benefits, Enabling Mechanisms

Education, Training and Extension: Key Findings in Naga

Opportunities

• CAgO’s Current Programs

• Extensive local knowledge

• Some UA present (local skill)

• Political will (UA support)

Constraints

• Stigmatization and low self-confidence of farmers

• Accessibility issues

• Lack of multi-stakeholder collaboration

• Lack of comprehensive data to inform enabling policies

Education, Training and Extension: Recommendations

• Database Creation: a Multi-Stakeholder Approach• Bottom-Up Education: Keep Local Needs in Mind • Make UA a Public Affair: Community Links, Food

Festivals, Wellness Fairs• Link Education and Marketing: “Natural Naga”, “Bicol’s

Bounty”

Marketing and Finance• Fosters Entrepreneurship

Strategies

• Credit provision

• Investment in technology

• Savings schemes

• Tax incentives

Marketing and Finance: Key Findings in Naga

Opportunities

• Strong political representation of producers and vendors

• Well established infrastructure

Constraints

• Poor transport services

• Mistrust of cooperatives

• Limited marketing assistance

• Lack of alternative livelihood strategies

• Uneven geographical coverage

Marketing and Finance: Recommendations

• Improve business management assistance

• Create and promote cooperatives • Provide appropriate financing schemes • Promote alternative livelihood strategies • Improve dispersion of financial and

marketing strategies

Land Use Planning and Management

Planning Supports UA

• Strategic Land Use Plans

• Standards for Development

• Regulatory Frameworks

Land Use Planning and Management: Key Findings in Naga

Opportunities

• Proactively direct growth and development

• Comprehensive Land Use Plan 2000 update

• GIS Technology

Constraints

• Land availability, accessibility and usability

• Lack of agricultural land designation in the city proper

• Lack of incentives for UA designation of idle lands

Land Use Planning and Management: Recommendations

• Assess city proper lands for UA suitability (CP lead)

• Designate and integrate UA into Land Use Plan 2007

• Develop or revise municipal by-laws & legislation

The Policy Continuum

UA Plan to inform policy

decisions

Policy translates to action

Research, Education and Advocacy supports UA

Recommendations

Institutionalization of UA

Marketing Strategies

Education

Research & Development

Land Use & Management

Income generation

EnvironmentalSustainability

HealthBenefits

FoodSecurity

Empowerment

Turning Recommendations into Action: “The Naga Farming School”

• Education centre with attached communal garden plot demonstrating sustainable agriculture

• City earmarks public lands to support UA project initiative

• Grounded in local needs, making use of local assets and opportunities

• Showcase of Naga’s commitment to UA and sustainability

Conclusion We feel that Naga is on the cusp of achieving a sustainable UA system;

all that remains is putting the

wheels in motion in order to enable it to

grow.

Thank you to all who helped along the way…

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