Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
DocumentOther documentLao, Census of agriculture 2010/2011
Sample questionnaire
2010Also available in:
No results found.LAO_ENG_QUE(F5)_2011 -
DocumentOther documentLao People’s Democratic Republic – Lao Agricultural Census 2010/11
Report to the 2010 Round of the World Programme for the Census of Agriculture (2006-2015)
2010Also available in:
No results found.This country report presents the concise structural statistical data on the agricultural holdings such as size of holding, land tenure, land use, crop area, irrigation, livestock numbers, labour and other agricultural inputs for the country. -
DocumentOther documentLao People's Democratic Republic (The) - Agricultural Census 1998/99 Main Results
Report to the 2000 Round of the World Programme for the Census of Agriculture (1996-2005)
1998Also available in:
No results found.This country report presents the concise structural statistical data on the agricultural holdings such as size of holding, land tenure, land use, crop area, irrigation, livestock numbers, labour and other agricultural inputs for the country.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
-
Book (stand-alone)Technical studyMicroplastics in fisheries and aquaculture: status of knowledge on their occurrence and implications for aquatic organisms and food safety 2017
Also available in:
This technical paper will contribute to take stock of the scientific knowledge available on microplastics in fisheries and aquaculture. It will provide information on the most likely pathways in terms of sources, transport and distribution in both marine food chains and seafood value chains and will provide a framework to assess the risks that may (or not) affect commercial fish stocks and consumers, as well as review current practices and limitations of microplastic sampling techniques. -
Book (stand-alone)High-profileThe Benefits and Risks of Solar Powered Irrigation - a global overview 2018
Also available in:
No results found.The report gives a state-of-the-art overview of policies, regulations and incentives for the sustainable use of solar-powered irrigation technologies (SPIS) around the world. SPIS offer a viable, low-tech energy solution for irrigated agriculture, providing a reliable source of energy in remote areas, contributing to rural electrification, reducing energy costs for irrigation and enabling low emission agriculture. Nevertheless, SPIS have a significant initial investment cost and require innovative financing models to overcome this barrier to adoption, especially for small-scale farmers. Technical knowledge and service infrastructure is needed to ensure that the systems run effectively. Moreover, SPIS – if not adequately managed - bear the risk of fostering unsustainable water use as lower energy costs may lead to over-abstraction of groundwater. This report looks at how different countries work to create an enabling environment for SPIS technologies, while managing the risks that come with it. -
DocumentOther documentClimate Change Adapatation and Mitigation in the Food and Agriculture Sector. Technical Background Document from the Expert Consultation Held on 5 to 7 March 2008. FAO, Rome
HLC/08/BAK/1
2008Also available in:
No results found.Many countries worldwide are facing food crises due to conflict and disasters, while food security is being adversely affected by unprecedented price hikes for basic food, driven by historically low food stocks, high oil prices and growing demand for agro-fuels, and droughts and floods linked to climate change. High international cereal prices have already sparked food riots in several countries. In addition, rural people (who feed the cities) are now, for the first time, less numerous than city dwellers and developing countries are becoming major emitters of greenhouse gases. Many traditional equilibriums are changing, such as those between food crops and energy crops and cultivated lands and rangelands, as is the nature of conflicts in general. These changing equilibriums are, and will be, affected by changing climate, resulting in changed and additional vulnerability patterns.