3.4.6 Coordinating production
To take advantage of different market opportunities and respond to the needs of
buyers, FOs may have to coordinate the production of members. For example, FOs
may be required to supply a continuous amount of fresh produce throughout the
year, so they may need to organize members to stagger the stocking of their ponds.
The NaCSA’s farmer societies and the ALSC farmers in Indonesia also coordinate
production; however, at present they do so primarily to reduce disease risks. To achieve
this, farmers develop a crop plan together and stock their ponds within a specified
period of one another (in Andhra Pradesh, India, for example, farmer societies stock at
the time when white spot disease is at its lowest level).
BOx 8
Case Study 5: Aquaculture Livelihood Service Centres in Aceh, Indonesia
In response to the tsunami in December 2004, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) initiated
the Earthquake and Tsunami Emergency Support Project (ETESP) in Aceh, Indonesia,
to rebuild the livelihoods of the coastal communities that were most affected. A major
component of the project focused on fisheries and aquaculture (ETESP-Fisheries). Three
years were spent rehabilitating 3 000 hectares of shrimp ponds (tambaks). Between 2007
and 2009, in a process facilitated by the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific
(NACA) in collaboration with the ADB-ETESP project and the International Finance
Corporation (IFC), 3 689 farmers in 72 villages and five subdistricts established milkfish
and shrimp FOs in order to reduce disease risk and maximize profits through collective
implementation of BMPs developed by NACA. In 2009, these FOs established four
“Aquaculture Livelihood Service Centres” (ALSCs). In the absence of government and
other private-sector extension services in Aceh, these centres are expected to become fully
self-sustaining service centres for FOs through payment of service fees by members. The
ALSCs are owned and managed by community-based milkfish and shrimp farmers, and
the committee members are drawn from the fish-farming communities of their respective
subdistricts. The four ALSCs are expected to function as a network or “cluster” of service
centres and, as such, the committee members and lead farmers of the centres form the
leadership for a producer association at the district level to further business developments
in collaboration with various associated service providers such as hatchery operators, inputs
suppliers, processors and exporters.
The principal role of the ALSCs is to provide technical and business expertise to farmers.
Their activities include:
• facilitating group crop planning, including harmonized stocking and harvesting in
collaboration with various stakeholders to minimize the risk of disease outbreaks
during farming and improve the overall quantities simultaneously harvested from
many small-scale producers;
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