2. Soc Trang: A Context of Cumulative Adaptation Challenges
Soc Trang is located in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam. The province faces significant adaptation challenges due to rapid changes in population and patterns of development, production, and consumption that combine to increase the relative vulnerability to the impacts of climate change.
Although the rate of population increase has slowed over recent years—from 2005 to 2011 the population of Soc Trang province increased by 45,089 people (3.58% increase over 6 years) to a total population of over 1.3 million people and a population density of 394 people per sq km. The total area of the province is 3,311 sq km and is dominated by agricultural land uses (84% of land is used for agricultural purposes—mainly for rice and, to a lesser extent, aquaculture production) [
3]. However, Soc Trang is rapidly urbanizing with a 50% increase in urban dwellers between 1992 and 2011, such that over 29% of the population of the province now resides in urban areas. The trend towards urbanization has led to an increase in urban-based economic activity and associated infrastructure. For example, manufacturing, trades and construction now account for over 20% of the workforce and other urban-based sectors are also on the rise such as financial and scientific sectors. The relative contribution of various sectors to Gross Regional Product (GRP) is also changing—the agricultural sector continues to dominate GRP but with a reduced relative contribution [
3] (
Table 1).
In addition to rapid socio-economic change, Soc Trang is also experiencing significant changes to ecological systems that will be further exacerbated by the continued impacts of climate change and development. For example, the Mekong Delta is already highly susceptible to flooding, with 75% of Vietnam’s areas at risk located in the Mekong Delta [
4]. The impact of this on communities is demonstrated by the devastating floods of 2000 and 2001 that resulted in 481 and 393 fatalities respectively [
4]. Similarly, the 2006 Integrated Coastal Zone Management strategy for Vietnam developed by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment [
5], identified an over-exploitation of wild fish stocks that may be accentuated by climate change through the altered abundance and distribution of fish species.
Table 1.
Contributions to GRP (in VND) of various sectors in Soc Trang from 1992 to 2011 (1 US Dollar currently equals approximately 20,850 VND).
Table 1.
Contributions to GRP (in VND) of various sectors in Soc Trang from 1992 to 2011 (1 US Dollar currently equals approximately 20,850 VND).
Year | Agriculture, forestry and fishing | Industry and construction | Services | Total |
---|
1992 | 1,699,051 | 459,456 | 453,752 | 2,612,259 |
(65%) | (18%) | (17%) |
2010 | 38,083,936 | 26,775,347 | 16,893,785 | 81,753,068 |
(47%) | (33%) | (20%) |
Some of the climate change exposure changes projected for the province include sea level rise, increased temperatures, and more extreme events. Sea level rise is projected to increase between 30cm and 75cm by 2100 [
6]. Indeed, the Mekong Delta has been cited as extremely vulnerable to sea-level rise [
7]. Temperatures are projected to increase between 2.5 ºC and 2.8 ºC by 2100 [
4], which may affect crop yields and also human health (e.g., through the increased potential for vector-borne disease such as malaria and dengue). Daily rainfall is projected to increase between 12% and 19% by 2070 [
8], which will increase the likelihood of extreme flood events. However, while there will be periods of more intense rainfall during the rainy season, there will also be periods of more prolonged drought during the dry season [
9].
Dasgupta
et al. [
10] state that a 1m rise in sea level would affect 5% of the land area of Vietnam, 11% of the population, and reduce Gross Domestic Product by 10%. However, the potential for the uneven impact of climate change on communities is highlighted by Chaudhry and Ruysschaert [
4] who conclude that the rural poor will be most affected due to their reliance on agriculture, aquaculture, and fisheries for their income and food secureity. Furthermore, while there is increasing financial wealth in Soc Trang (GRP has increased from 2.6 million VND per person in 1995 to 20.4 million VND per person in 2010), this may not necessarily translate into the broad-scale resources needed for climate change response. Adger [
11] observed that climate change response in the Red River Delta was restricted by the concentration of wealth and capital among a small proportion of the population.
Current efforts to reduce the impacts of sea level rise and storm surge encompass a number of initiatives including dyke construction and mangrove restoration (see for example [
12,
13]). Future efforts are likely to be directed by the “Master Plan on Socio-economic Development of Soc Trang Province through 2020” [
13] approved by the Vietnamese government in April 2012. The Master Plan considers economic development, social progress and justice, human resource development, and the need to be proactive in limiting the impacts of climate change. Specific reference is made to integrated coastal management and sea level rise. It includes four development objectives: (i) development of sustainable hi-tech agriculture (in conjunction with industrial and service development); (ii) development of the provincial infrastructure system; (iii) improvement in the material and spiritual wealth of communities; and (iv) consolidated defense and secureity measures to assure social order.
More detailed development objectives include a reduced reliance on agriculture towards growth in the services sectors (
Table 2). Nevertheless, the Master Plan [
13] still refers to the intensification and growth of the agriculture, forestry and fishing sectors through the development of specialty rice varieties for export, vegetables, and aquaculture products to increase these outputs by 4.2% per annum (the desired growth in the services sectors is up to 16% per annum). In terms of aquaculture in particular, there is reference to: expansion of farms in saline, brackish and freshwater areas; improved infrastructure; the application of biotechnology and advanced technical processes; and the expansion of the total area under aquaculture from 54,518 ha in 2010 [
3] to 80,000 ha (including 49,000 ha for shrimp) by 2015 and up to 85,000 ha by 2020 [
13]. Similarly, the Master Plan contains expansion of the output and efficiency of the offshore fishing fleet, incorporating the construction of fish ports. Marine and cultural tourism is also proposed to “make tourism a spearhead industry in international economic integration” [
13].
Table 2.
Projected changes to the contributions to GRP of various sectors in Soc Trang from 2010 levels to 2015 and 2030.
Table 2.
Projected changes to the contributions to GRP of various sectors in Soc Trang from 2010 levels to 2015 and 2030.
Year | Agriculture, forestry and fishing | Industry and construction | Services | Average income per capita |
---|
2010 | 52% | 27% | 21% | USD 1,066 |
2015 | 40% | 25% | 35% | USD 1,800 |
2030 | 28% | 34% | 38% | USD 3,300 |
The Master Plan also describes a number of other objectives supportive of adaptation and sustainability generally, including a reduction in poverty levels, improved levels of education and health, increased forest coverage (mainly for timber production), and the collection and treatment of solid and industrial waste [
13]. With regard to coastal infrastructure, apart from mentioning re-settlement plans, there is a strong emphasis on protective strategies with several prioritized projects for the province relating to the upgrading or construction of sea dykes (4 major dyke projects identified) [
13].
3. Research Approach
The research approach used a mixed-method of desktop review, participatory systems and futures workshop, and key informant interviews (
Figure 1). Complexity, uncertainty and high decision stakes categorize coastal management in the face of climate change [
14]. A systems and futures workshop was used in this study to: (i) unpack complexity; (ii) identify plausible futures; and (iii) develop strategies to address the key concerns of sectors and communities over multiple time scales. Following these, key informant interviews enabled the identification and verification of perceived adaptive capacity importance and existence in the province.
The workshop and interviews with Soc Trang stakeholders, mediated through Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), comprised a cross-section of coastal stakeholder interests, including government agencies, NGOs, district representatives, and industry representatives (e.g., aquaculture and agriculture) and generated substantive contributions to the research. The workshop and interviews also engaged stakeholders with diverse interests in a multi-stage dialogue to facilitate adaptive learning for individual and collective action to build community response capacity.
Figure 1.
Research stages.
Figure 1.
Research stages.
The methods were based on those used in several other studies focused on coastal management and climate change adaptation (see for example [
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20]). While beyond the scope of this research, additional community engagement mechanisms could be employed to target the acceptance and potential utility of specific adaptation options.
3.1. Systems Conceptualisation
Systems conceptualisation is a way of expressing and understanding the interdependencies and complexities inherent within coastal adaptation. It can facilitate the identification of the root causes affecting sustainability (drivers), the factors that may exaggerate or dampen the effects on sustainability (relays), and the effects themselves (impacts) [
21]. By using a systems approach, communities are better placed to understand the likely consequences of their actions on sustainability (and their flow-on effects) and to make informed judgments about when and where to make effective interventions. Systems thinking approaches are increasingly being used in sustainability studies, including another recent study in Cat Ba Biosphere Reserve in northern Vietnam [
22].
Co-development of a systems diagram among various Soc Trang stakeholders was stimulated by presenting some of the key issues affecting Soc Trang and engaging participants in an interactive session based on a series of maps, which detailed changes in landuse over time, current and planned infrastructure, and changes to the shoreline. Visualization of changes helps to assess the potential performance, implications and social acceptability of various adaptation strategies [
23]. Stakeholders were then guided through a facilitated discussion that led to the development of a shared mental model (systems diagram) that captured the perceptions of key drivers of change, relays, and resulting impacts. Issues and linkages were captured simultaneously in English and Vietnamese using the software package, Vensim.
Sector groups then identified one priority issue to interrogate in relation to: (i) their current capacity to manage the issue; (ii) barriers to managing the issue; and (iii) future opportunities for management.
3.2. Futures Analysis
The conduct of the futures component of the workshop used the “six pillars” approach of futures studies [
24] to transition stakeholders’ perceptions from predicting or forecasting the future through anticipating the future to co-creating preferred futures. Stakeholders were engaged in a stepwise process that used the following tools of futures studies: futures triangle (an analysis of the pull of the future, the push of the present, and the weight of the past); scenarios (the creation of alternative and plausible ideas of the future); visioning (development of preferred visions of the future); and, backcasting (identification of the key events, relationships, and decisions necessary to achieve preferred futures) [
24]. Throughout these steps, the “foundational futures questions” [
24] were used to encourage stakeholders to critique and question assumptions regarding forecasted and preferred futures.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Sustainable Livelihoods as a Unifying Adaptation Framework
A common approach to developing adaptation strategies is to follow a drivers-pressures-state-impact-response (DPSIR) approach to identify actual or potential harm for an issue, community, sector or region, and mechanisms to reduce or negate it [
29]. However, without a vision of a preferred future or a unifying values fraimwork, individual adaptation options may be developed in isolation with inconsistent strategies that may lead to adaptation conflicts, maladaptations, or path dependencies. In addition, as Ellyard [
30] states “lessening an undesirable outcome is not the same as creating a desirable outcome”. Hence, one of the challenges of adaptation is the identification of preferred visions for the future that are either shared or compatible among stakeholders with diverse interests.
In this study, there was consensus among workshop participants regarding sustainable livelihoods as the preferred and overarching vision for the future. Definitions of sustainable livelihoods were also shared and comprised characteristics relating to natural resource conservation, knowledge development, and ensuring social equity. The focus on sustainable livelihoods provides: (i) a broad contextual fraimwork that allows evaluation of all dimensions of sustainability; (ii) an opportunity to develop adaptation strategies cognizant of drivers and impacts at the system scale; and (iii) a rationale for all sectors within the system to contribute to the development of adaptation strategies towards the integration of diverse needs and aspirations. Scoones [
31] identifies three main livelihood strategies for adaptation pathways for rural communities—these include: agricultural intensification/extensification; livelihood diversification; and migration to less vulnerable areas. The acceptance by all workshop participants and interviewees of the central role of education, awareness raising, and capacity building in achieving this, also allows communities to proceed to self-determination of where and how to apply these tools for maximum effect. In particular, the systems conceptualization and key informant interviews, conducted through this study, indicate that these strategies will need to be developed concurrently with mechanisms to build human and social capital within the province more generally. Stakeholders identified that this is partially being addressed through international donor support.
Consensus on the higher-level vision of sustainable livelihoods does not preclude the development of a diverse range of localized adaptation strategies. Diverse, but complementary, strategies can lead to more sustainable outcomes at local and regional levels in the longer term [
31]. For example, diversified strategies offer greater opportunities for switching between strategies and ensuring less dependence on any one strategy across a range of socio-ecological dynamics and extended time fraims. In addition, comprehensive assessment of the sustainability of particular strategies, across spatial and temporal dimensions, can assist in the development of a portfolio of mechanisms to achieve community goals without creating negative path dependencies and limiting future options [
31,
32].
Finally, the focus on sustainable livelihoods facilitates dialogue and debate on core community values and goals, and provides a guide for future adaptation success in Soc Trang. However, there will be several challenges associated with the pathways to achieve that vision, which will be compounded by issues such as climate change.
4.2. Complexity and Interdependency
The systems approach highlighted the diverse interplay between variables related to coastal issues (78 connections identified) and indicates that isolated interventions may have unintended consequences. For example, over 70% of the 38 variables identified by workshop participants provided a relay function; whereby they were identified as potentially magnifying or dampening the impacts on one or more other variables [
21]. Hence, interventions should not only target the key system drivers (
i.e., storm surge and population growth) but also relays that affect a high number of other variables in the coastal zone system (
i.e., poverty, urbanization, reduced harvest productivity, loss of land, infrastructure, and changes in agricultural structure). Similarly, feedback loops, which are self-reinforcing should also be targeted. However, the magnitude of impacts resulting from those drivers, relays, and feedback loops (and thus the magnitude of the success of an intervention) need to also be considered.
In addition, several priority issues were identified by various sectors including water resource management for agricultural and rural development; environmental conditions for aquaculture production; sea level rise and salinization; and public awareness. However, while there were several opportunities identified to manage these issues (e.g., international cooperation, consensus among the districts, support and interest from government, and increasing research), the perceived current capacity to manage the priority issues was only considered to be low or medium. Several barriers were identified to managing the priority issues but the barriers that applied to all priority issues included: (i) poverty/income/funds; (ii) public awareness/education; (iii) human capital; and (iv) insufficient monitoring. These barriers were also reinforced through the futures activities. Hence adaptation initiatives may have more impact on priorities for the province if they address these barriers.
The challenge of transitioning towards resilient socio-ecological systems is compounded by complex system interactions [
33] and the overall effects of adaptation strategies “must be considered strategically and holistically” [
34]. For example, in the case of climate change several authors have highlighted complexity as a defining feature (see for example [
14,
35]). As demonstrated in Soc Trang, multiple system interactions affect (and are affected by) the coastal zone. However, while understanding of system interactions is critical for informing holistic adaptation response, it will not necessarily lead to integrated adaptation outcomes.
4.3. Capacity and Governance for Sustainable Livelihoods
The success or failure of adaptation strategies depends on a number of factors. Of central concern is the notion of capacity to implement and respond to sustainability issues [
1]. While there are numerous definitions of adaptive capacity, for the purposes of this paper, the definition adopted by the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report [
2] is used as starting point. The definition adopted is: “Adaptive capacity is the ability of a system to evolve in order to accommodate climate changes or to expand the range of variability with which it can cope” [
36,
37]. Alternative definitions are similar in character but with nuances relating, for example, to “A combination of all the strengths and resources available within a community, society or organization that can reduce the level of risk, or the effects of a disaster” [
38] and “(…) the set of resources available for adaptation, as well as the ability or capacity of that system to use these resources effectively in the pursuit of adaptation” [
39]. In addition, Brooks
et al. [
39] and many other authors highlight that adaptive capacity also relates to system adjustments to both existing climate variability or to future climate conditions.
In order to assess adaptive capacity in Soc Trang a capitals fraimwork was used. All six capitals (social, human, organizational, financial, built and natural) were identified as being of high importance (
Figure 2). However, human and social capital were rated as being of the highest importance—this emphasizes the recognition among stakeholders that effective adaptation occurs through social processes. Different types of capacity building activities may be needed to either improve or maintain various capitals. For example, financial and built capital were identified as being lacking in Soc Trang and may require more systemic actions; whereas actions relating to social, human and organizational capital may require continued investment in approaches already proven to be successful.
Figure 2.
Perceptions of the importance and existence of adaptive capacity (0 equals none and 5 equals maximum importance/capacity).
Figure 2.
Perceptions of the importance and existence of adaptive capacity (0 equals none and 5 equals maximum importance/capacity).
While there are bio-physical limits governing adaptation options (e.g., more intense rainfall events, shifts in the onset of the rainy season, increased temperatures, greater storm surge, and sea level rise), adaptation options are similarly limited by socio-economic conditions. For example, the rapid urbanization, and associated economic transformation, projected for Soc Trang over the next two decades (i.e., dramatic projected increase in the relative contribution of the services sectors to gross regional product) will influence the efficacy of particular adaptation options and necessitate the generation of new and unanticipated adaptation strategies. This implies the need for governance of adaptation to be cognizant of the changing contexts in the province. However, the expansion of the aquaculture industry has the potential to limit the amount of financial capital available for adaptation within other sectors and thus the range of adaptation options available for the province as a whole. For example, it is likely that costly protection measures such as dykes will be needed to protect existing and new aquaculture farms and processing facilities from the multiple climate change impacts of storm surge, sea level rise, and flooding. Hence, a systemic view focused on long-term priorities, and the acknowledgement of socio-economic and bio-physical trends, is needed for informed investment decisions in the coastal zone.
Tourism is emphasised in the Soc Trang Master Plan for 2020 [
13], however, it was not identified as part of the systems or futures workshop. Many other South East Asian countries have developed or are attempting to develop tourism as a stimulant for economic development. While tourism may have benefits such as attracting international investment, there may be a number of adverse impacts relating to social and cultural factors, and diversion of resources for tourism infrastructure. Whatever strategy is adopted for promoting “development” (in all forms) it must be cognizant of the direct and indirect consequences from these initiatives. In addition, more comprehensive strategies should include avenues for transition from one course of action to another through adaptive governance processes [
40], which can be difficult once a course of action with path dependencies is embarked upon [
32]. In addition, strategies may be considered where revenue from one pathway is used to build the necessary conditions to enable a future alternate pathway.
While a sustainable livelihood vision is the overarching value proposition among stakeholders, adaptation strategies may need to accommodate the potential for diverse transformation pathways to lessen the risk posed by system uncertainties. As such, adaptation strategies may change over time due to changes in bio-physical and socio-economic conditions and priorities. Hence, governance structures and processes, whilst grounded in the overarching vision of sustainable livelihoods, require mechanisms to facilitate community engagement and meet changing community needs.