November 2006


 

 

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Land Of Rice And Honey

By Lee Middleton

James Phiri is on the road again. Having sold 750 kg of rice, 100 kg of peanut butter, and 50 kg of honey in 3 days to grocery stores between Chipata and Nyimba, the business and marketing manager has only to negotiate the potholed road back to Lundazi before he can get some rest.

Phiri is one of the newest faces at Community Markets for Conservation (COMACO), a conservation programme started by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), and operating in the Game Management Areas (GMAs) around the Luangwa Valley.

"I knew very little about the Wildlife Conservation Society - just that they were involved with stopping poachers," Phiri recalls, explaining how he, a man with nearly 20-years of finance and business experience, ended up working at a wildlife conservation NGO. "Sure I felt bad when I saw pictures of elephants with their tusks removed, but I wasn't an animal enthusiast and I didn't know much about conservation. But reading the documents about COMACO, I became very interested in the organisation's efforts to conserve wildlife by fighting the root causes of poverty, and to do so using a business strategy."  The areas where COMACO operates are notable for their remote and wild beauty. Driving through much of the Luangwa Valley, one enjoys long uninterrupted stretches of mopani woodland, here and there interspersed with more diverse floral spectres. Occasional clusters of neatly thatched houses whose smooth clay walls are adorned with geometric designs, sit beside cylindrical granaries under massive mango trees. Maize, sorghum, and cotton fields wink past before surrendering to the bush. Men on over-loaded bicycles, puku, bushbuck and elephant, and possibly a cotton-truck or two are the only other traffic plying the sandy track. A lovely environment for those seeking a picturesque bush-experience; a problematic one for resident villagers trying to eke out a living.

Begun in 2001, COMACO is a descendent of an earlier conservation initiative called ADMADE. A collaborative venture with the previous National Parks and Wildlife Service (predecessor to ZAWA), ADMADE concerned itself with building capacity in communities so they could benefit from and manage the natural resources in their Game Management Areas. But where ADMADE defined itself by its work within the communities, COMACO has purposefully stepped outside those bounds to link communities with external markets and the opportunities they offer.

Having completed a study that showed a connection between a lack of food and money, and increased poaching levels in the Mwanya chiefdom, WCS Director Dale Lewis decided to test the study's theoretical inverse; i.e., that increased food security and access to money in the area would result in decreased poaching of wildlife. However, even assuming that WCS could improve food security and income generation, Dale understood that reduced poaching would by no means be a foregone conclusion.

Thus, like most relationships, the one between COMACO and its participants functions on a quid pro quo basis. To wit: COMACO provides villagers training in improved farming techniques and other livelihood skills, basic material inputs like seed, and, courtesy of the World Food Programme,  a limited amount of food support during the growing season to ensure that the most food insecure farmers do not resort to poaching while waiting for their harvest. In exchange, participating farmers surrender illegal guns and snares, promise to cease poaching wildlife, and follow conservation farming techniques. Come harvest, COMACO buys all of the farmers' crops at a fair price, and has pledged to continue doing so as long as the farmers keep their end of the bargain.

"That was how COMACO was born. To make sure that markets for conservation were guaranteed," says Edwin Matokwani, ZAWA's Eastern Province Regional Manager.

Brian Nguni, a farmer from Luero (Chifunda chiefdom), who went on to become a trainer and then depot manager for COMACO explains, "Before COMACO, there was no market here. We only had some individual buyers who would bring things like clothes to exchange with our products. Farmers had no profit. But then WCS put a market here. Now farmers can grow things : rice, honey, groundnuts and make a profit." 

The profit comes from COMACO's ability to sell its products to a larger urban market that can appreciate the extremely high quality and relatively low price of these conservation friendly goods, marketed under the brand name, "It's Wild." The largest seller is an aromatic variety of rice known as Chama rice, but the peanut butter and honey have also proven very popular.

COMACO selected these products because of the source crops' relatively positive impact on the area's ecological health (e.g., nitrogen fixing properties, reliance on healthy natural forests, etc.), and because "adding value" to them is simple. Adding value in these cases being a question of roasting and grinding the groundnuts, removing stones and broken pieces from the rice, and straining debris from the honey. Processing and packaging the products at COMACO's three business centers in Lundazi, Mfuwe, and Feira, the "It's Wild" goods are then taken for sale. Currently they are available in the towns of Eastern Province and in Lusaka, but the goal is national coverage, and some international sales.

The response to the project from farmers all around the Valley has been overwhelming. It is in fact difficult to find a single farmer who has no knowledge of or connection to the COMACO program. "Everyone is very much willing to be involved in COMACO. They provide a market for our produce, and they're teaching us how to improve our soil and crops," says Sidney Ngulube, a farmer and carpenter from Mapambe. Maureen Phiri of Mukwela agrees, adding, "The big problem here is poverty and hunger. WCS is helping with our food needs because of the animals. So we protect the animals, and things are improving."

Though livelihood improvement is a critical objective, it is also a means to an end, and that end remains wildlife protection. Systematic surveys have yet to be completed, but professional hunters from the area have noted a decrease in snaring around the zones where COMACO functions. Given the variety of external factors that can influence both food security and wildlife conservation, however, many people agree that the real proof of COMACO's success will be its long term sustainability. James Phiri is one of those people, and as COMACO's business manager, he plays a critical role in ensuring that future. 

"We want every consumer to understand that by buying our products they are actually supporting the conservation of wildlife. Their purchase means that the farmer out there in Chitungulu or Kasembe will be able to grow the crop again next year, and that market can provide our farmers income for the rest of their lives," Phiri says.

Phiri also acknowledges that no matter how good the cause, at the end of the day consumers will base their choices on quality and price. He is the first to emphasize the importance of treating COMACO as a business, not a charity, and with a negligible advertising budget, he currently is relying on the quality of the products to sell themselves. Though this is COMACO's first year to formally market the "It's Wild" rice, honey, and peanut butter, the consumer response has been "incredibly positive."

Phiri cites an example from his most recent marketing trip. In the town of Sinda he convinced the owner of a small shop to buy 60 sacks (totaling 160kg) of Chama rice. The man had resisted initially, explaining to Phiri that he had plenty of stock of other brands, including imported Thai and Indian varieties. But Phiri's persistence wore him down. Two days later as Phiri was on his way back to Chipata, the man phoned him, begging him to come back with more Chama rice - word of mouth had sold it all.

"It's Wild" Chama rice, honey, and peanut butter can be found at shops in Eastern Province, and in Lusaka at the following supermarkets: Castle, Proc-Press, Embassy, Melisa and SparDdowntown. Please call James Phiri at 095 553-945 in Eastern Province, or Ishaka Milazi at 097 800-889 in Lusaka for locations nearest you. For more information about COMACO, see: www.itswild.org