
全球约五分之一农田已经退化:加快发展再生农业正当其时
20世纪80年代,越南许多小农将主要作物从茶叶改为咖啡,以期获得更高的利润。年轻的郑晋荣(Trinh Tan Vinh)便是其中之一。
Juliana Jaramillo is the global lead for regenerative agriculture at the Rainforest Alliance. Growing up on a coffee farm in Colombia, she learned at an early age the challenges that producers of tropical commodities face. Jaramillo oversees the Rainforest Alliance’s global strategy for driving more regenerative agricultural practices and policies across its certification and landscape programmes.
Before joining the Rainforest Alliance in 2019, Jaramillo worked for 17 years in academia, the public sector and the private sector, including Bayer Crop Science. Her work in sustainable agriculture, biodiversity conservation and integrated pest management has spanned multicultural settings across Latin America, Africa and Europe.
Jaramillo studied agronomic engineering at the University of Caldas in Colombia. Jaramillo earned her Ph.D. in entomology, biological control and IPM from the University of Hannover in Germany, as well as her M.Sc. degree in entomology and phytopathology. In 2015, the Alejandro Ángel Escobar Foundation awarded Jaramillo the Environment and Sustainable Development Prize for her research on semiochemicals in East African coffee landscapes.
20世纪80年代,越南许多小农将主要作物从茶叶改为咖啡,以期获得更高的利润。年轻的郑晋荣(Trinh Tan Vinh)便是其中之一。
En la década de 1980, muchos pequeños agricultores de Vietnam cambiaron su cultivo principal del té al café para obtener una mayor rentabilidad. Uno de ellos era un joven llamado Trinh Ta...
In the 1980s, many smallholder farmers in Viet Nam switched their primary crop from tea to coffee, seeking higher profitability. One of them was a young man named Trinh Tan Vinh.