Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project

Field and laboratory studies indicate that geotextile mats constructed from palm leaves are an effective, sustainable and economically viable soil conservation technique. The three-year (2005-08) EU-funded BORASSUS Project (Contract Number INCO-CT-2005-510745) is evaluating their long-term effective...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: M. A. Fullen, C. A. Booth, R. W. Sarsby, K. Davies, R. Kugan, R. Bhattacharyya, M. Subedi, D. A. Luckhurst, J. Poesen, T. Smets, A. Kertesz, A. Toth, Z. Szalai, G. Jakab, K. Kozma, B. Jankauskas, G. Jankauskiene, C. Bhmann, G. Paterson, E. Mulibana, J. P. Nell, G. M.E. Van Der Merwe, A. J.T. Guerra, J. K.S. Mendona, T. T. Guerra, R. Sathler, J. F.R. Bezerra, S. M. Peres, Z. Yi, L. Yongmei, T. Li, M. Panomtarachichigul, S. Peukrai, D. C. Thu, T. H. Cuong, T. T. Toan, F. Jonsyn-Ellis, S. Jallow, A. Cole, B. Mulholland, M. Dearlove, C. Corkill
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=38849100323&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/61110
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Chiang Mai University
id th-cmuir.6653943832-61110
record_format dspace
spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-611102018-09-10T04:04:46Z Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project M. A. Fullen C. A. Booth R. W. Sarsby K. Davies R. Kugan R. Bhattacharyya M. Subedi D. A. Luckhurst J. Poesen T. Smets A. Kertesz A. Toth Z. Szalai G. Jakab K. Kozma B. Jankauskas G. Jankauskiene C. Bhmann G. Paterson E. Mulibana J. P. Nell G. M.E. Van Der Merwe A. J.T. Guerra J. K.S. Mendona T. T. Guerra R. Sathler J. F.R. Bezerra S. M. Peres Z. Yi L. Yongmei T. Li M. Panomtarachichigul S. Peukrai D. C. Thu T. H. Cuong T. T. Toan F. Jonsyn-Ellis S. Jallow A. Cole B. Mulholland M. Dearlove C. Corkill Environmental Science Field and laboratory studies indicate that geotextile mats constructed from palm leaves are an effective, sustainable and economically viable soil conservation technique. The three-year (2005-08) EU-funded BORASSUS Project (Contract Number INCO-CT-2005-510745) is evaluating their long-term effectiveness in controlling soil erosion and assessing their sustainability and economic viability. These studies are in progress in 10 countries, both in the industrial north (in Europe) and in the developing south (Africa, South America and South-East Asia). This paper focuses on agro-environmental applications and potential in the developing south (The Gambia, South Africa, Brazil, China, Thailand and Vietnam). Biogeotextiles offer potentially novel bioengineering solutions to environmental problems, including technologies for soil conservation, sustainable plant production and use of indigenous plants, improved ecosystem management, decreasing deforestation, improving agroforestry and cost-effective geotextile applications in diverse environments. Biogeotextiles may provide socio-economic platforms for sustainable development and the benefits for developing countries may include poverty alleviation, engagement of local people as stakeholders, employment for disadvantaged groups, small and medium enterprise (SME) development, earning hard currency, environmental education and local community involvement in land reclamation and environmental education programmes. These benefits are achieved through: (a) promotion of sustainable and environmentally-friendly palm agriculture to discourage deforestation, promoting both reforestation and agroforestry; (b) construction of palm geotextiles enabling development of a rural labour-intensive industry, particularly encouraging employment of socially-disadvantaged groups and (c) export of palm geotextiles to industrialized countries could earn hard currency for developing economies, based on the principles of fair trade. 2018-09-10T04:04:46Z 2018-09-10T04:04:46Z 2007-01-01 Journal 17433541 2-s2.0-38849100323 10.2495/ECO070131 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=38849100323&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/61110
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Environmental Science
spellingShingle Environmental Science
M. A. Fullen
C. A. Booth
R. W. Sarsby
K. Davies
R. Kugan
R. Bhattacharyya
M. Subedi
D. A. Luckhurst
J. Poesen
T. Smets
A. Kertesz
A. Toth
Z. Szalai
G. Jakab
K. Kozma
B. Jankauskas
G. Jankauskiene
C. Bhmann
G. Paterson
E. Mulibana
J. P. Nell
G. M.E. Van Der Merwe
A. J.T. Guerra
J. K.S. Mendona
T. T. Guerra
R. Sathler
J. F.R. Bezerra
S. M. Peres
Z. Yi
L. Yongmei
T. Li
M. Panomtarachichigul
S. Peukrai
D. C. Thu
T. H. Cuong
T. T. Toan
F. Jonsyn-Ellis
S. Jallow
A. Cole
B. Mulholland
M. Dearlove
C. Corkill
Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
description Field and laboratory studies indicate that geotextile mats constructed from palm leaves are an effective, sustainable and economically viable soil conservation technique. The three-year (2005-08) EU-funded BORASSUS Project (Contract Number INCO-CT-2005-510745) is evaluating their long-term effectiveness in controlling soil erosion and assessing their sustainability and economic viability. These studies are in progress in 10 countries, both in the industrial north (in Europe) and in the developing south (Africa, South America and South-East Asia). This paper focuses on agro-environmental applications and potential in the developing south (The Gambia, South Africa, Brazil, China, Thailand and Vietnam). Biogeotextiles offer potentially novel bioengineering solutions to environmental problems, including technologies for soil conservation, sustainable plant production and use of indigenous plants, improved ecosystem management, decreasing deforestation, improving agroforestry and cost-effective geotextile applications in diverse environments. Biogeotextiles may provide socio-economic platforms for sustainable development and the benefits for developing countries may include poverty alleviation, engagement of local people as stakeholders, employment for disadvantaged groups, small and medium enterprise (SME) development, earning hard currency, environmental education and local community involvement in land reclamation and environmental education programmes. These benefits are achieved through: (a) promotion of sustainable and environmentally-friendly palm agriculture to discourage deforestation, promoting both reforestation and agroforestry; (b) construction of palm geotextiles enabling development of a rural labour-intensive industry, particularly encouraging employment of socially-disadvantaged groups and (c) export of palm geotextiles to industrialized countries could earn hard currency for developing economies, based on the principles of fair trade.
format Journal
author M. A. Fullen
C. A. Booth
R. W. Sarsby
K. Davies
R. Kugan
R. Bhattacharyya
M. Subedi
D. A. Luckhurst
J. Poesen
T. Smets
A. Kertesz
A. Toth
Z. Szalai
G. Jakab
K. Kozma
B. Jankauskas
G. Jankauskiene
C. Bhmann
G. Paterson
E. Mulibana
J. P. Nell
G. M.E. Van Der Merwe
A. J.T. Guerra
J. K.S. Mendona
T. T. Guerra
R. Sathler
J. F.R. Bezerra
S. M. Peres
Z. Yi
L. Yongmei
T. Li
M. Panomtarachichigul
S. Peukrai
D. C. Thu
T. H. Cuong
T. T. Toan
F. Jonsyn-Ellis
S. Jallow
A. Cole
B. Mulholland
M. Dearlove
C. Corkill
author_facet M. A. Fullen
C. A. Booth
R. W. Sarsby
K. Davies
R. Kugan
R. Bhattacharyya
M. Subedi
D. A. Luckhurst
J. Poesen
T. Smets
A. Kertesz
A. Toth
Z. Szalai
G. Jakab
K. Kozma
B. Jankauskas
G. Jankauskiene
C. Bhmann
G. Paterson
E. Mulibana
J. P. Nell
G. M.E. Van Der Merwe
A. J.T. Guerra
J. K.S. Mendona
T. T. Guerra
R. Sathler
J. F.R. Bezerra
S. M. Peres
Z. Yi
L. Yongmei
T. Li
M. Panomtarachichigul
S. Peukrai
D. C. Thu
T. H. Cuong
T. T. Toan
F. Jonsyn-Ellis
S. Jallow
A. Cole
B. Mulholland
M. Dearlove
C. Corkill
author_sort M. A. Fullen
title Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
title_short Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
title_full Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
title_fullStr Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
title_full_unstemmed Contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: The BORASSUS Project
title_sort contributions of biogeotextiles to sustainable development and soil conservation in developing countries: the borassus project
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=38849100323&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/61110
_version_ 1681425559815454720