– building resistance against climate change
PATRICIA Persaud is a single parent on a mission to be a true example of women’s empowerment — encouraging women and girls to be economically independent.
Managing a farm under harsh climatic conditions is hard, along with being a single parent and a full-time teacher is no easy task.
However, Patricia and her sons started farming to assist with expenses since her teacher’s salary was inadequate. Every weekday from 06:30hrs to 08:00hrs and returning from 17:00hrs, and on weekends and holidays, they would tend to their cash crops of pak choi, ochroes, peppers, cucumbers, and cabbage.
“I am stress-free, active, and financially stable,” says Patricia.
In 1986, Patricia moved from the island of Wakenaam to Parika Back, East Bank Essequibo.
Both Wakenaam and Parika are rural communities that depend on small farming to support livelihoods.
In Guyana, there is a saying, ‘farming deh in me blood’ which means a person is from a place or family with a farming background.
In those days the population in Parika Back was small, the roads were undeveloped, and food crops were cultivated only to meet household needs on smallholdings — subsistence agriculture.
With the resurfacing of the connecting road to Parika Back, farm-to-market access became easier, which encouraged the expansion of small-scale farming in the area.
In April 2020, at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) facilitated a pilot project on Climate-Smart Agriculture for farmers in the Parika/Namryck communities of Guyana.
According to FAO Representative Dr. Gillian Smith, these communities are prone to flooding, while the rising temperatures and changing precipitation patterns increase soil vulnerability.
Added to climate variability are pests and crop diseases and increased atmospheric carbon dioxide, all of which add more stress on small farmers.
The FAO-IICA pilot offered an affordable greenhouse solution known as a shadehouse that is effective on a small, sustainable scale to mitigate some of the effects of climate change and provide strategies for smallholder farmers to adapt to the changing environment.
ADAPTIVE CAPACITY

Greenhouses cannot reverse climate change, but they are well suited to increase the adaptive capacity for sustainable farming by jointly addressing food security and climate challenges.
Globally, Dr. Smith noted that almost three billion people depend on small-scale agriculture for their livelihoods, whether directly or indirectly, while three out of four people in developing countries live in rural areas.
She explained that small-scale rural farmers play a pivotal role in agri-food systems and with highly varied incomes, land sizes, assets, and gender inequalities; they are considered the most vulnerable groups.
The FAO’s programmes in Guyana, Dr. Smith explained, are targeting small farmers in rural communities to help them maximise their potential by providing strategies to increase and diversify their production, improving the quality of their produce to support better access to markets, building resistance against climate change, and supporting gender equality.
The FAO’s work, she explained, also supports the sustainable use of natural resources, especially by small farmers who are often heavily dependent on these resources.
“Embracing new technology such as shadehouses helps to give people like Patricia an added advantage in resisting climate change and meeting several sustainable development goals,” Dr. Smith noted.
The amount of female single-parent households relying on farming as a source of income in Guyana is unknown.
Single-parent households, the FOA representative noted, especially those headed by women are prevalent in society.
With the increasing impact of climate change and the rise in food prices, many single mothers find it very challenging to support their children with one income.
Taken into account that almost 45 per cent of rural women have a role in agricultural production, the FAO has indicated the importance of supporting women in agriculture to move beyond production for subsistence and into higher-value, market-oriented production.
In Guyana, Dr. Smith said “We are looking at gender equality and women empowerment, and the associated principles to make a difference to help them to maximise their potential to improve their livelihood.”
SHADEHOUSE FARMING SOLUTION
Patricia was a beneficiary of the shadehouse farming solution and was able to pursue her dream to plant lettuce, celery, and broccoli, which are delicate crops that require shadehouse- type technology.
During the pandemic, moving produce from farm to market was restricted and the market price for cash crops became very expensive. For farmers like Patricia, the traders come to her farm for the produce, and with the shadehouse, the crops grew better and healthier, the harvest was bountiful and so were the earnings.
Patricia’s message is, “farming is a good experience, when the price is right the benefits are rewarding, but it is a luck and chance and you must have patience and keep planting.”
She continued: “Monitoring the market prices is also very important to avoid huckster hustle.”
The term is used to describe the way traders will use different strategies to get you to sell your produce at the cheapest price then resale at excessively higher prices.
Patricia is looking forward to her retirement in the next two years and plans to expand her shadehouse to facilitate a larger cultivation of lettuce, celery, and broccoli.
She has expressed gratitude for the technical assistance provided by the FAO and IICA to improve resilience to climate change while creating a better livelihood for her family.