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SIMVA 2010-2011: AN OVERVIEW National Consultation Workshop 4 November 2011 Siem Reap, Cambodia.

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Presentation on theme: "SIMVA 2010-2011: AN OVERVIEW National Consultation Workshop 4 November 2011 Siem Reap, Cambodia."— Presentation transcript:

1 SIMVA 2010-2011: AN OVERVIEW National Consultation Workshop 4 November 2011 Siem Reap, Cambodia

2 Overview of SIMVA baseline survey 2010-2011 Survey process Outputs Baseline Indicators Drawing boundary and sampling

3 SIMVA 2010-11: the Process Starting in late 2010 Questionnaire based on results of the pilot study Survey (training, fieldwork, data entry, data cleaning, analysis, reporting, etc) undertaken by four national survey teams, Supported by MRCS, including a regional team

4 SIMVA 2010-11: the process Samples drawn by the regional team Data entry template prepared by the regional team for all countries Data analysis undertaken separately by each national survey team Synthesis provided for the whole LMB corridor

5 SIMVA 2010-11: Outputs A questionnaire Four national reports One regional report Technical guidelines

6 Baseline Indicators Baseline vulnerability (8) Dependence on fish, OAA, and irrigation and riverbank cultivation (31) Resilience (12) Shocks and trends (9) Vulnerability to climate change (10)

7 The HH Questionnaire I.Introduction, identifiers, quality control II.HH Members III.Most important occupation IV.Livelihood activities V.Alternative livelihoods VI.Dependence on fish VII.Dependence on OAAs and OAPs VIII.Dependence on cultivated crops IX.Aquaculture X. Consumption of food yesterday XI. Food storage and purchasing XII. Expenditure XIII. Key sources of Income XIV Assets XV. Water supply and road access XVI. Flooding XVII. Drought XVIII. Climate Change

8 Sampling frames and sampling 2010-11 Baseline 15 km corridor 8 zones 340 hhs per zone 680 hhs per country 2,720 hhs in total

9 Technical guidelines For the SIMVA Long-term monitoring National Consultation Workshop 4 November 2011 Siem Reap, Cambodia

10 SIMVA: Future Monitoring Structure of the guidelines Indicators Interval of monitoring

11 Structure of the guidelines Introduction SIMVA Baseline survey 2010-11 Indicators Sampling Fieldwork, data entry and analysis The household questionnaire Update of secondary data Report writing Recommendations for the future monitoring

12 Indicators Baseline vulnerability (8)? Dependence on fish, OAA, and irrigation and riverbank cultivation (30)? Resilience (12)? Shocks and trends (9)? Vulnerability to climate change (10)?

13 Baseline vulnerability (8) 1.Incidence of poverty 2.Mean household size 3.Infant mortality rate 4.Child mortality rate 5.Child malnutrition rate (stunted (low height for age, underweight (low weight for age, Wasted (low height for weight) 6.Dependency ratio 7.% of HHs with access to safe water 8.Mean distance of HH to road accessible in all weather by track.

14 Dependence on fish 1.% of adults whose main occupation is fishing 2.% of HHs whose most important occupation is fishing 3.% of HHs whose 2nd most important occupation is fishing 4.% of HHs with members who fished in last 12 months 5.% of HHs with income from fish sales 6.Fishing effort (mean kgs catch per hours spent fishing) 7.% of last fish catch sold

15 Dependence on fish 1.% of last fish catch sold 2.% of last fish catch consumed 3.% of last fish catch preserved 4.Mean monthly income per capita from fish sales 5.% of HHs using mainstream/Tonle Sap in the last 12 months for fishing 6.% of HHs migrating seasonally to fish from mainstream/Tonle Sap 7.% of HH income per capita from fish sales 8.% of HH food per capita from fish

16 Dependence on OAAs 1.% of HHs that collected OAAs in last 12 months 2. % of HHs with income from OAAs 3. Mean HH monthly income per capita from OAAs 4. % of HHs collecting OAAs from source that depend on Mekong flooding/irrigation in last 12 months 5. % of HH income per capita from OAA 6. % of HH food per capita from OAA (measured by calorie intake)

17 Dependence on irrigation and riverbank cultivation 1.Mean area of land cultivated by HH in the last 12 months 2. % of cultivated land with rice in wet and dry seasons in the last 12 months 3. % of HHs dependent on water extracted from the Mekong for irrigation in last 12 months 4. Mean monthly HH income per capita from rice sales 5. % of HH income from irrigated crops including rice

18 Dependence on irrigation and riverbank cultivation (cont’) 6. % of HH rice produced under irrigation 7. % of HHs with riverbank cultivation 8. Mean size of riverbank cultivation 9. Mean income per annum from riverbank cultivation 10. % of HH income per capita from riverbank cultivation 11. % of HH food per capita from riverbank cultivation

19 Resilience (12) 1.% of HHs with non-aquatic sources of income 2.% of adult household members working outside the village 3.Mean expenditure per capita per year 4.Mean monthly income from non-aquatic sources 1.% of expenditure on non-food items

20 Resilience (12) 1.% of HHs with non-aquatic sources of income 2.% of adult household members working outside the village 3.Mean expenditure per capita per year 1.Mean monthly income from non-aquatic sources 1.% of expenditure on non-food items 1.% of HHs engaged in aquaculture

21 Resilience (12) 7. % saying they have alternative livelihood options 8. % of adults household members who below to [specified] social groups 9. % of HHs able to produce more than half their own food 10. Number of livestock units per capita 11. Mean value of productive assets 12. Mean value of none productive assets

22 Shocks and trends (9) 1.% of HHs whose primary domestic water sources runs dry for more than x weeks in the dry season 2.% of fishers reporting 'much less' fish than 5 yrs earlier 3.% of fishers reporting less food due to declining fish catch 4.% of fishers reporting less income due to declining fish catch 1.% of HHs who changed occupation due to decline in NR in

23 Shocks and trends (9) 6. % of HHs reporting less food security than 5 yrs earlier 7. % of HHs reporting less income than 5 yrs earlier 8. % of HHs reporting water shortages that resulted in crop damage in the last 12 months 9. % of HHs reporting water excess that resulted in crop damage in the last 12 months

24 Vulnerability to climate change (10) 1.Proportion of population dependent on climate- dependent resources (agriculture, fisheries, aquaculture) 2.Proportion of population with low resilience, but high dependence on climate related resources. 3.Proportion of loss of rice due to floods, droughts, and/or other forms of climate variability. 4.Proportion of loss of livestock due to floods, droughts, and/or other forms of climate variability. 1.Value of livestock lost due to floods and droughts.

25 Vulnerability to climate change (10) 6. Average values of property losses due to floods, droughts, and/or other forms of climate variability. 7. Most frequently used coping strategies for floods, droughts, and other forms of climate variability. 8. % of households experiencing losses from floods, drought, and/or other forms of climate variability in the last 12 months 9. % of households assets lost in floods, droughts, and/or other forms of climate variability 10. Mean months to recovery from last flood in the last 5 years

26 Intervals and sources of data Baseline Vulnerability – 5 to 10 years Dependency on fish – 3 years Dependency on OAAs – 3 years Dependency on Mekong irrigation – 3 years Shocks – yearly Vulnerability to climate change- 3 years

27 Thank you very much for your attention


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