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Organic certification for shrimp value chains in Ca Mau, Vietnam: a means for improvement or an end in itself?

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Abstract

Eco-certification has been used as a tool to mitigate adverse effects of aquaculture production and might thus be understood as a private approach to sustainable ecosystem management. In production forests in Ca Mau, Vietnam, where mangrove have suffered degradation despite legal protection, different projects have targeted reversing this trend by means of private certification using the ‘Naturland’ organic standard as a reference. So far the outcomes have, however, been proven unsatisfactory. With the aim to better understand the reasons for these poor outcomes, a survey of forty households was conducted in a production forest in Rach Goc commune, Ngoc Hien District. We evaluated farmers’ perceptions on mangrove management, the drivers guiding shrimp farming, and whether there was a difference between participants and non-participants in a former ‘Naturland’ organic project. To complement the survey, a range of stakeholders involved in shrimp value chains were interviewed to better understand the terms and benefits of certification. The results of this survey suggested that, when applied to shrimp–mangrove farming systems in production forests in Ca Mau, ‘eco-certification’ and associated benefits are not very satisfactory. The survey results revealed that certified farms do not show significant differences to non-certified farms in terms of social and environmental benefits. As far as the implementation process was concerned, the survey results showed that a failure to integrate local farmers as participants consequently resulted in households becoming ‘objects’ for certification and not project partners with equal weight and power. It appears that rather than being a tool for improvement, ‘Naturland’ certification for shrimp–mangrove farming systems in Ca Mau’s production forests has become an end in itself.

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Notes

  1. In Ca Mau there are two types of mixed shrimp–mangrove farms: ‘integrated’ systems where shrimp are grown in narrow canals embedded in the mangroves and ‘separated’ systems where shrimp are grown in one or more ponds that are clearly separated from the mangrove forests, usually by means of a dike. Both production types are generally separated from the outside waterbody by a dike surrounding the farming area and connected to it by a sluice gate that can be closed and opened for water exchange.

  2. A stage in the life cycle of shrimp, generally used for stocking in shrimp production.

  3. Self-reported and reported by FMB.

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Acknowledgments

Particular thanks go to all the farmers who participated in the interviews. We would further like to thank the Wye Agricola Club (http://wyeagricolaclub.org.uk) for supporting the fieldwork with a financial contribution and QGIS for providing open-source GIS software. Finally, our thanks go also to Simon Bush, Wageningen University, for his support and inputs to this paper.

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Correspondence to Urs Baumgartner.

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Baumgartner, U., Nguyen, T.H. Organic certification for shrimp value chains in Ca Mau, Vietnam: a means for improvement or an end in itself?. Environ Dev Sustain 19, 987–1002 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-016-9781-z

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