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NUTMON: an overview Gerdien Meijerink.

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Presentation on theme: "NUTMON: an overview Gerdien Meijerink."— Presentation transcript:

1 NUTMON: an overview Gerdien Meijerink

2 NUTMON and TOA NUTMON TOA

3 Objectives of NUTMON (NUTrient MONitoring)
Through nutrient monitoring: Increase awareness of soil fertility decline Find INM technologies that secure production and sustainability Find policy instruments to facilitate adoption

4 Context: Kenya, 1984: depletion is 24 kg N and 4 kg P per ha,yr
(Stoorvogel and Smaling, 1990)

5 Nutrient Monitoring Activities
NUTMON Projects Pilot phase (methodology development) Various applications: Participatory technology development Evaluation of spatial and temporal variability of soil fertility (management) Evaluation of low external input technologies Evaluation of current and potential land use practices Assessment of Peri-urban agriculture Regions: SSA (Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Burkina Faso, Mali) Asia (Vietnam, China)

6 Approach: Diagnosis Particip. INM technology dev. INM policy scenarios
INM options Facilitating policies Farm/community level District/national level

7 Diagnosis at community level
Farmers Research/ext/NGO Criteria/indicators Workshops Resource flow mapping Matrix ranking Indigenous INM technology Criteria/indicators Resource inventory Quantifying nut.balance Economic performance Literature review INM options Diagnosis workshop

8 Participatory technology development

9 Diagnosis at district and national level
Stakeholders Research/extension/NGO Criteria/indicators Interview Workshops Criteria/indicators Literature review Identification policy instruments Modeling policy impact Diagnosis workshop

10 Policy / INM scenarios INM-options and Facilitating policy instruments
Joint evaluation Stakeholders assessment

11 Approach at farm level Quick scan through participatory flow mapping
Monitoring of a season/year (if required) Nutrient balance and economic performance Participatory technology development Implementation and monitoring

12 Participatory resource flow mapping

13 Quantitative assessments

14 Some results: nutrient stocks

15 Some results: nutrient flows

16 Why TOA? Limitations of NUTMON: Added benefits of TOA
Analysis is at farmers’ field level Analysis limited to current practices Added benefits of TOA NUTMON results can be upscaled to district level Scenario’s involving NUTMON results with other trade-offs can be explored

17 Latest update on NUTMON
NUTMON now part of MonQI: Monitoring for Quality Improvement MonQI: Nutrient monitoring (NUTMON) Labeling and certification (pesticide free production) Assessment of livelihoods (Tsunami victims) …..?


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