Assessing the sustainability of coconut chain in Sanquianga region, Colombia

The concept of sustainable development has been widely worked on since its introduction by the Brundtland report (Keeble, 1988), establishing three fundamental pillars: economic viability, social equity, and ecological integrity. Current social and economic imbalances between regions highlight that...

Full description

Autores:
Sinisterra Solís, Nelson Kevin
Corona Mariscal, Alejandro
Sanjuan, Neus
Carrillo Rodríguez, Lilian Andrea
Aponte Jaramillo, Elizabeth
Cajigas Romero, Margot
Clemente, Gabriela
Tipo de recurso:
Conferencia (Ponencia)
Fecha de publicación:
2022
Institución:
Universidad Autónoma de Occidente
Repositorio:
RED: Repositorio Educativo Digital UAO
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:red.uao.edu.co:10614/14775
Acceso en línea:
https://hdl.handle.net/10614/14775
https://red.uao.edu.co/
Palabra clave:
Comercio de productos agrícolas
Produce trade
Sustainability
Coconut
Rural development
Coconut productive chain
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos reservados - Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2022
Description
Summary:The concept of sustainable development has been widely worked on since its introduction by the Brundtland report (Keeble, 1988), establishing three fundamental pillars: economic viability, social equity, and ecological integrity. Current social and economic imbalances between regions highlight that efforts toward sustainable development must focus on increasing the economic and social conditions in the poorest and emerging economies while encouraging effective practices that generate low environmental damage. Sanquianga, located in south-western Colombia, is an agricultural region in the territories prioritized by the national government for implementing sectoral plans and programs within an integral rural reform framework. These actions intend to mitigate the incidence of armed conflict, poverty, institutional weakness, and the rise of illicit economies, which have historically characterized the socio-economic conditions of this region (EVA, 2017; DANE, 2020). Coconut is a crop culturally rooted in the Sanquianga region and with great economic potential. Nevertheless, its productive chain is weak, mainly because of low-tech farming and insufficient pest control knowledge, where neither machinery, fertilizer, nor pesticide products are used. In addition, no extensive use of the generated outputs is carried out, since only the edible part of the harvested fruit has traditionally been considered valuable output. This study is framed in a two-year project that aims to boost the socioeconomic context of the Sanquianga region by contributing to develop a sustainable coconut supply chain. Specifically, the project evaluates the pre-feasibility of a proposal to create a processing plant for products derived from coconut fruit to make comprehensive use of this commodity (UPV, 2021). As a project deliverable, a report will be carried out. This report aims to be a basis for seeking funding from the government or NGOs to build a coconut processing plant owned by the local community. The prefeasibility evaluation refers to both the evaluation of the technical and legal feasibility, as well as the viability of the three pillars of sustainability. In this study, a preliminary analysis of the current social, economic, and environmental impacts of the coconut production chain in Sanquianga is developed, so that it serves as a basis for establishing the incremental factors of the project proposal compared to the existing one