An Overview Of Our Solution
- Population Impacted:
- Continent: North America
Organization type
Population impacted
Size of agricultural area
Production quantity
People employed
Describe your solution
Describe your implementation
External connections
What is the environmental or ecological challenge you are targeting with your solution?
Describe the context in which you are operating
Southern Belize is largely agrarian and rural. Kekchi and Mopan Maya indigenous communities in the foothills of the Maya
Mountains tend to have poor and/or fragile soils. With limited access to markets and emerging expenses as communities
move to participate in the currency based economy via land use tied to shifting cultivation has accelerated the process of
habitat loss. Much of the best soils are dedicated to export crops, at the expense of food security. %80 of the population is
considered to be living in poverty. %46 are considered to be extremely impoverished. Waterborne parasites are common.
The community we are located in, San Pedro Columbia, has seen its population expand from seven hundred people in
1988, when we started work, to one thousand seven hundred in 2014. Land close to the village has been over-farmed,
with shortened fallow periods, resulting in decreased yields and a need to expand farming further afield. The land closest
to the village is tired, and the frontier of agriculture is ever further away.
How did you impact natural resource use and greenhouse gas emissions?
Language(s)
Social/Community
Water
Food Security/Nutrition
Economic/Sustainable Development
Climate
Sustainability
Diversified cropping systems enable farmers to access multiple markets. Our turmeric has a ready local market, our vanilla has high value for export, cacao has ready international markets, and timber species offer long term “retirement finds” for later in life. Additionally, we have produced fodder in perennial cropping systems for raising animals, like pigs, poultry and rabbits for additional markets and food security. The solution is how to create agroecologies that replicate succession in damaged land, creating robust, healthy stacked polycultures that also mimic form and function of primary habitat. If well designed, on a $ value times kilogram per hectare economic model, such systems can be financially lucrative while repairing soil