Frontiers in Environmental Science (Dec 2019)

Linking Earth Observations for Assessing the Food Security Situation in Vietnam: A Landscape Approach

  • Ate Poortinga,
  • Quyen Nguyen,
  • Karis Tenneson,
  • Austin Troy,
  • Austin Troy,
  • David Saah,
  • David Saah,
  • Biplov Bhandari,
  • Walter L. Ellenburg,
  • Aekkapol Aekakkararungroj,
  • Lan Ha,
  • Hai Pham,
  • Giang Nguyen,
  • Giang Nguyen,
  • Farrukh Chishtie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Land cover change and its impact on food security is a topic that has major implications for development in population-dense Southeast Asia. The main drivers of forest loss include the expansion of agriculture and plantation estates, growth of urban centers, extraction of natural resources, and water infrastructure development. The design and implementation of appropriate land use policies requires accurate and timely information on land cover dynamics to account for potential political, economical, and agricultural consequences. Therefore, SERVIR-Mekong led the collaborative development of a Regional Land Cover Monitoring System (RLCMS) with key regional stakeholders across the greater Mekong region. Through this effort, a modular system was used to create yearly land cover maps for the period 1988–2017. In this study, we compared this 30-year land cover time-series with Vietnam national forest resources and agricultural productivity statistics. We used remote sensing-derived land cover products to quantify landscape changes and linked those with food availability, one of food security dimension, from a landscape approach perspective. We found that agricultural production has soared while the coverage of agricultural areas has remained relatively stable. Land cover change dynamics coincide with important legislation regarding environmental management and sustainable development strategies in Vietnam. Our findings indicate that Vietnam has made major steps toward improving its' food security. We demonstrate that RLCMS is a valuable tool for evaluating the relationship between policies and their impacts on food security, ecosystem services and natural capital.

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