PKSF SMART project vegetable cultivation with RECP practices
Stories

RECP practices transformed Rubel’s vegetable farm from conventional to sustainable

On a crisp morning in Mostafabad, Md Rubel Hosain walks through his 148-decimal vegetable farm with the quiet confidence of someone who has discovered a better way of doing things. The 37-year-old farmer, who supports a family of five, has become something of a local pioneer in sustainable agriculture.

His journey toward Resource-Efficient and Cleaner Production (RECP) practices began with skepticism. “When GBK’s workers first told me about RECP, I wasn’t entirely convinced,” Rubel admits, standing beside rows of thriving tomatoes and eggplants. “But I decided to try mulching, pheromone traps, color traps, and organic fertilizers in my vegetable cultivation. The result? My production costs have decreased, profits have increased, and many people in the area have now started growing vegetables using mulching and organic methods.”

Mulching and multiple cropping in cucumber field under SMART project

A shift in approach

Before embracing RECP practices, Rubel’s farm operated like most conventional vegetable enterprises in the region. Chemical fertilizers and pesticides were liberally applied, water flowed freely through traditional irrigation channels, and yields hovered around 8-10 tonnes per hectare. Net profits barely crossed BDT 60,000-70,000 per hectare per season. It was marginal but had to scope for expansion or investment.

The turning point came in July 2025, when Rubel secured a loan of BDT 100,000 through Gram Bikash Kendra (GBK) and began implementing RECP techniques. The changes were methodical: organic fertilizers replaced excessive chemical inputs, mulching conserved precious water, and color traps and pheromone traps managed pests without the use of harsh pesticides.

Measurable impact

The transformation was faster than Rubel expected. Within a single cropping season, the numbers told a compelling story. Water consumption dropped by 25-30%, while chemical fertilizer and pesticide use decreased by 20-35%. But efficiency was not the only gain – crop yields actually increased to 11-13 tonnes per hectare, and the vegetables’ improved quality commanded better market prices.

The financial impact was even more striking. Production costs fell by 15-20%, and net profits soared to approximately BDT 100,000-120,000 per hectare per season, which is a remarkable 40-60% increase compared to his baseline earnings.

“The soil health has improved significantly,” Rubel explains, gesturing toward his integrated farming setup where five cattle provide both milk for his family and organic manure for his fields. “The vegetables have fewer chemical residues, which consumers appreciate. And I’m spending less on inputs while earning more.”

Metric

Before RECP (Baseline)

After RECP Adoption

Average Yield

8–10 tons per hectare

11–13 tons per hectare

Water Usage

High conventional use

Reduced by 25–30%

Chemical Use

High reliance

Reduced by 20–35%

Net Profit

BDT 60,000–70,000

BDT 100,000–120,000

Looking ahead

Rubel’s influence extends beyond his own farm boundaries. His success with RECP practices has sparked interest throughout Mostafabad and surrounding areas, with neighboring farmers beginning to adopt similar methods.

His aspirations have grown alongside his profits. He envisions expanding his cultivated area, diversifying into off-season and value-added vegetables, and adopting digital platforms for better market information and input sourcing. His wish list includes improved irrigation systems like drip or sprinkler technology and post-harvest facilities for grading, sorting, and packaging.

“I want to strengthen my market linkages further,” he says, “and explore certification and branding for RECP-grown vegetables. There’s so much potential.”

As the morning sun climbs higher, Rubel surveys his thriving farm – a patchwork of green vitality where sustainability and profitability have proven to be partners rather than competitors. His story offers a template for other smallholder farmers in Bangladesh: that environmental responsibility and economic success can flourish together.

Agroecological farming under the PKSF's SMART Project
Stories

Agroecological farming: Cultivating food in harmony with nature

Md Julfiker Rahman, Senior Program Manager, SMART Project, PKSF

Agroecological farming is a sustainable approach to agriculture that applies ecological principles to the design and management of food systems. It seeks to produce food in harmony with nature while enhancing farmers’ livelihoods, community resilience, and environmental health. The key feature of agroecology is its holistic perspective; rather than focusing solely on yields, it considers the entire agroecosystem—soil, water, plants, animals, and people. It emphasizes biodiversity, recognizing that diverse crops and landscapes are more resilient to pests, diseases, and climate shocks. Furthermore, it relies on local knowledge and farmer innovation, blending traditional wisdom with scientific understanding to create context-specific solutions.

The SMART project actively promotes agroecological farming among farmers in the high-value crops sub-sector through various sub-projects dedicated to vegetables, fruits, flowers, and medicinal plants. While the core objective of the project is to help farmers adopt climate-resilient RECP practices, many of these interventions align perfectly with agroecological principles. Here is how the SMART project is laying the foundation for agroecological farming:

Building living soil

Healthy soil is the bedrock of agroecology. SMART farmers enrich the earth using vermicompost, trichocompost, mulching, and mechanical weeders, alongside composting crop residues to increase organic matter in the soil. By feeding the beneficial microorganisms in the soil, they unlock the natural nutrients plants need to thrive. Cover crops like mung bean and lentil are often interplanted with main crops to naturally balance nitrogen levels, while minimal tillage preserves the delicate soil structure and fungal networks essential for long-term soil health.

Manual Weeding does the work of 4 in just an hour

Diversity as a strategy

Unlike industrial monocultures, agroecological farms embrace variety. Crop rotation – growing different crops in sequence – breaks pest cycles and balances nutrient demands. For instance, mango growers cultivate mung bean, lentil, mustard, ginger, or turmeric in the same orchard, while pineapple growers intercrop with papaya, ginger, chili, and aram. Vegetable growers often plant cauliflower, cabbage, carrots, and coriander together, ensuring the most efficient use of land and resources.

Natural pest management

Rather than relying on synthetic pesticides, farmers utilize bio-pesticides and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) systems, such as pheromone, color, and light traps. Some have adopted the “perching” method, installing bamboo poles as resting spots for insectivorous birds that naturally consume harmful insects. In fruit cultivation—specifically for mangoes, bananas, and dragon fruits—farmers use fruit bagging to protect their harvest from pests, ensuring the produce remains safe and healthy for consumption.

Water efficiency

The project introduces modern techniques to ensure every drop of water counts. This includes the use of drip and sprinkler irrigation, foggers in Gerbera flower sheds, and the use of hosepipes for transporting water to minimize the loss typically associated with open canals.

Climate resilience

A key intervention of the SMART project is the promotion of climate-smart and adaptive crop varieties suited to specific geographical regions. For example, the G-9 banana is a dwarf variety particularly resilient to cyclones. In the Barind tract, where water is scarce, the project encourages fruit cultivation over rice crops to conserve the local water table.

Agroecological farming produces nutritious food while healing the land. As climate change challenges conventional industrial agriculture, these time-tested yet innovative practices offer a pathway toward food systems that support both the community and the environment.

ESDO WWD 1
News & Events

SMART project marks International Women’s Day with rallies, discussions across the country

SMART project implementing Partner Organizations of PKSF observed International Women’s Day 2026 through a series of vibrant community events across project areas, highlighting women’s rights, contributions to the economy, and persistent challenges. The celebrations on March 8 aligned with this year’s global theme, “Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls”.

Under the SMART project, sub-projects implemented by various PKSF partners organized colorful processions, rallies, discussion sessions, debate competition, human chain, and quiz competitions for students in different parts of the country. Environment Clubs mobilized micro-entrepreneurs and local community members to take active part in the programs. Participants discussed the significance of Women’s Day, women’s pivotal role in society and the national economy, their entitlements, and the barriers they continue to face. In several locations, the Partner Organizations distributed tree saplings and books among quiz competition winners to promote both knowledge and environmental awareness. The events served to spotlight the SMART project’s deliberate focus on women’s economic empowerment.

SMART’s results framework sets a specific target that 65 percent of supported microenterprises adopting climate-resilient practices and achieving revenue growth should be female-owned. The project also aims for at least 30 percent women’s representation in the management committees of non-revenue-generating common facilities to strengthen female leadership. Additionally, women-led microenterprises receive tailored training — based on professional assessments — in financial literacy, green technologies, and marketing strategies for eco-friendly products. These targeted interventions reflect SMART’s broader commitment to fostering gender-inclusive, climate-resilient microenterprise development across Bangladesh.

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News & Events

SMART project holds 3rd QPRM and recognizes top performing POs

The Sustainable Microenterprise and Resilient Transformation (SMART) Project organized its 3rd Quarterly Progress Review Meeting (QPRM) in 2026 to assess implementation progress and strengthen coordination with Partner Organizations (POs). During the event, the project recognized three top-performing Partner Organizations for the first time for their stellar performances in implementing sub-project activities.

The review meetings were held from 2 to 8 March 2026, bringing together SMART project officials and 200 representatives from 51 Partner Organizations, who are implementing 66 sub-projects across the country.

The inaugural session was presided over by PKSF Deputy Managing Director Md Mashiar Rahman, who highlighted the project’s distinctive approach of assessing the progress of individual microenterprises alongside overall development outcomes. He emphasized the importance of adopting Resource-Efficient and Cleaner Production (RECP) practices and urged Partner Organizations to achieve their targets within the stipulated timeframe.

In his opening remarks, Project Coordinator A. K. M. Zahirul Haque underscored the project’s long-term vision of promoting green growth among microenterprises through sustainable and climate-resilient practices.

The SMART Project recognized three top-performing Partner Organizations for their outstanding performances in implementing sub-project activities during the period October 2025 to January 2026. Ghashful, National Development Programme (NDP), and Paribar Unnayon Songstha received the ‘Achievement Award’ for their respective sub-sectors- High Value Crops, Loom, and Cattle and Buffalo.

During the meetings, Partner Organizations presented progress updates on their respective sub-projects and discussed implementation challenges, lessons learned, and future action plans.

The SMART Project, a five-year initiative, aims to promote climate-resilient and green growth by supporting around 80,000 microentrepreneurs across Bangladesh by 2028.

PKSF – Jashore 31
Stories

Reshma Khatun’s success in environment-friendly flower farming

Everywhere you look in Haria village of Jhikargachha upazila in Jessore, you can see eye-catching flower fields. Yet the worries of flower farmers are endless. The vast fields are filled with a variety of flowers including roses, marigolds, gerberas, chrysanthemums, and more. However, it becomes difficult for flower farmers to calculate their profit and loss at the end of the season. The ever-increasing prices of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, the cost of excessive water use and irrigation, the weeds that accumulate on the land, and the plant remains after harvesting flowers—all of this, like for all other flower farmers, constantly cast a shadow of uncertainty over Reshma Khatun (30).

Reshma’s voice carries regret, “Even though I cultivated flowers using the methods I learned from my parents, it was difficult to bring home a profit.” The constant reliance on chemical fertilizers and pesticides in conventional farming not only increased costs but also destroyed the soil quality of her land. The excessive use of pesticides to control insects was reducing the quality of her flowers. Sometimes the flowers did not even fetch the right price in the market. Water wastage was another major problem. Electricity bills were increasing due to excessive irrigation, as was the reliance on groundwater.

As losses mounted, continuing to cultivate flowers on two bighas of land became an uphill battle for Reshma. A family of five members, workers’ wages, and an uncertain income at the end of the season — all these worries seemed to be overwhelming her.

In the midst of this crisis, PKSF’s SMART project emerged as a ray of hope. Reshma joined the project through the Rural Reconstruction Foundation with a great hope. Although she was skeptical at the beginning, her conventional thinking began to change through training. Reshma first learned about the Resource-Efficient and Cleaner Production (RECP) practices through the project. Through training in eco-friendly farming methods, she learned about modern methods of flower cultivation at low cost, reducing waste without harming the environment. Under the project, she started her eco-friendly flower cultivation journey with a loan of three lakh taka.

Reshma started using organic fertilizers and organic pesticides with renewed enthusiasm. The health damage caused to her and the workers by using chemical fertilizers and pesticides has also shown positive change. In addition, instead of chemical sprays, she started using colored traps and pheromone traps to control insects. This reduces costs, improves the quality of flowers, and keeps the flowers fresh for longer. Additionally, she avoided the previous ‘flood irrigation’ method and started irrigating the flower fields in a controlled manner using hose pipes. This not only reduces water wastage but also lowers her electricity bill and reduces her dependence on groundwater.

The waste that used to accumulate in the field after collecting flowers has now become a new resource with the advice of the project. She is now making organic fertilizer from flower residues and organic waste. Reshma says, “What I used to throw away before is now food for my land. This organic fertilizer now helps retain soil moisture and increases soil fertility.”

She has witnessed the results of this change with her own eyes. Where her seasonal income was once around BDT 175,000, it has now increased to BDT 225,000. In just a year, Reshma’s income from two bighas of land has increased by BDT 50,000.

Reshma purchased a mini power tiller to mechanize and modernize the farm. This has reduced the dependency on labor and significantly increased the speed of work. Reshma says with a smile, “Earlier, I needed more workers for cultivation and weeding. Now, one worker can do the work of cultivation and weeding with machines.”

Today, that flower field in Haria village is no longer just a picture of worry. There are signs of change. Reshma herself now teaches others about environment-friendly flower farming methods. She is involving people in environment club meetings. Following her path, other flower farmers have also started cultivating in a new, environment-friendly way.

Reshma is a successful flower farmer today, having overcome past losses. She has proven that the right advice, knowledge, training, timely support, and environment-friendly decisions can change the life of a woman, a field, and even the future of a village.

The soft afternoon light slowly spreads across the flower fields. Rows of marigolds and gerbera flowers sway in the wind. Reshma Khatun stands in the middle of the flower fields. There is no fatigue in her eyes, only a deep expectation as she looks into the distance. She dreams of one day cultivating more diverse flowers. Her own brand of flowers will be developed. Flowers will be sold online, and their fame will spread to different parts of the country.