Local Led Innovation in Guatemala's Indigenous Communities: Building Climate Resilience Together

Sisters Maudilia and Lesbia Magaly Raxjal Casia, Mayan farmers and members of a local growers association, welcome visitors to their village farm site in Chuixilón, Santa Cruz Balanyá. These indigenous entrepreneurs, who successfully produce tomatoes, onions, and strawberries, demonstrate how floating cover technology adapts traditional farming to climate challenges. Their leadership in sharing climate-smart practices on their ancestral territory inspires agricultural innovation throughout Guatemala's highl
Sisters Maudilia and Lesbia Magaly Raxjal Casia, Mayan farmers and members of a local growers association, welcome visitors to their village farm site in Chuixilón, Santa Cruz Balanyá. These indigenous entrepreneurs, who successfully produce tomatoes, onions, and strawberries, demonstrate how floating cover technology adapts traditional farming to climate challenges. Their leadership in sharing climate-smart practices on their ancestral territory inspires agricultural innovation throughout Guatemala's highlands. Image credit: Heather Hayashi.

Local Led Innovation in Guatemala's Indigenous Communities: Building Climate Resilience Together

By Heather Hayashi, Isabel Alonzo Flores, Luis Andrés Arévalo, Edwin De León, Rolando Cifuentes, Archie Jarman

Floating cover at Chuixilón field site
Patricia Arce, Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Horticulture Central America Regional Hub Manager, observes tomato growth with project field coordinator, Edwin De León, inside the floating cover structure. Beyond protecting crops from weather extremes, these structures reduce the level of pesticides needed, benefiting both farmer and consumer health. Photo credit: Heather Hayashi.

A misty May morning in Guatemala's highlands brings welcome relief after a heavy rain. The overcast sky hangs low over deep green mountains, while humid air clings to everything it touches. But stepping inside one of the floating cover structures, the transformation is immediate: the temperature is relatively stabilized, promoting production. This is climate-smart agriculture in action.

"Climate change is strongly impacting the region," explains Rolando Cifuentes Velásquez, director of the Center for Agricultural and Food Studies (CEAA) at Universidad del Valle de Guatemala. "By promoting the use and scaling of these technologies, it is expected that farmers will be able to continue producing and harvesting in the future. This has a high impact on the sustainability of food production and local food security, since 60-70% of the products we consume come from small producers."

The locally led Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Horticulture project brings together leadership from Universidad del Valle de Guatemala (UVG), with Cifuentes, serving as principal investigator, alongside co-investigator Luis Andrés Arévalo Rodríguez, who coordinates CEAA's Applied Entomology Laboratory.

A New Path for Traditional Agriculture

In these highlands, where indigenous communities have farmed for generations, climate change threatens traditional agricultural practices and food security. To address these challenges, the project focuses on sustainable, cost-effective solutions including improved floating structures, row covers, and nethouses. These protected cultivation methods in combination with drip irrigation create controlled environments for crop production stabilizing temperatures during extremes while defending against pests — a growing concern as climate patterns shift. Combining these technologies with improved soil health practices and efficient irrigation systems, offers farmers new ways to adapt to changing climate conditions.

Traditional floating cover
Traditional floating cover made with bamboo poles and agrotextile material in Santa Crúz Balanyá, Chimaltenango. Image credit: Josué Bocel.

The project's effectiveness was demonstrated during recent severe weather. "During the rainy season in Chimaltenango, there was a day with bad winds and intense rainfall. The traditional structures were highly damaged in comparison with the improved structure that was barely damaged, easy to repair," Arévalo notes.

For over 15 years, small-scale producers have used basic protected agriculture structures, often built with fragile materials like red cane or bamboo. The project's improved floating cover design represents a significant advance. "The structure is designed so that it can be easily assembled and disassembled, which facilitates its transportation and storage, mainly due to the land tenure status of small producers who are mainly tenants," explains Arévalo.This practicality matters deeply to local farmers. "For our small-scale growers, each square meter of land is critical!" emphasizes Cifuentes. "The producers are aware of the fragility of their structures and materials, as compared to the improved floating cover, that has higher durability and longer lifetime."

Planting
Local producers work alongside project technicians to plant tomatoes in a new floating cover structure in Río San Juan community, Aguacatán, Huehuetenango. This hands-on approach exemplifies the project's 'learning by doing' methodology that combines technical expertise with indigenous farming knowledge. Image credit: Josué Bocel.

The impact of these innovations is already visible in communities like Tecpán, Chimaltenango, where Ricardo Alfredo Ordoñez represents a new generation of indigenous farmers embracing climate-smart agriculture. After securing financing through local institutions, Ordoñez established a 1,000-square-meter greenhouse that allows him to produce tomatoes year-round. "Agriculture is a constant learning [process]”says Ordoñez, whose success has inspired him to seek additional training in water harvesting and integrated pest management through the project.

Similarly in the village of Chuixilón, Santa Cruz Balanyá, farmer Don Vinicio Raxjal has witnessed remarkable results with protected cultivation. After implementing the project's floating roof structure with mesh and galvanized metal posts, Raxjal saw such promising outcomes that he invested in expanding these practices across an additional 1,000 square meters of production area. His experience demonstrates how combining traditional knowledge with new technologies can transform farming practices while building climate resilience.

Archie Jarman at Chuixilón
Farmer Don Vinicio Raxjal shares his experience with floating cover structures during a site visit with Horticulture Innovation Lab Associate Director Archie Jarman. Raxjal's successful implementation of climate-smart technology in Santa Cruz Balanyá led him to expand his protected cultivation area. Image credit: Leonel Antonio Contreras.

Building Success Through Community Partnership

Success stems from recognizing local expertise. "Local farmers and their families know very well the art of agriculture. They have a lot of common sense and know their needs and limitations," Cifuentes observes. "The adoption process will go smoothly and fast when the new technology is economically viable." The project's strength lies in its community-centered approach and evidence-based practices, which unfolds in four integrated phases:

  • Establishing baseline conditions through community-led surveys and field sampling.
  • Co-creating research trials with indigenous farmers and local stakeholders.
  • Implementing field trials using traditional "learning by doing" methodologies.
  • Sharing success stories through farmer networks.

This collaborative process ensures that new technologies complement existing farming wisdom. Through partnerships with indigenous growers' associations, women and youth groups, and local institutions, the CEAA team helps communities enhance soil health and water management practices while adapting to climate change. The result? A sustainable pathway for agricultural adaptation that respects and builds upon traditional practices in Guatemala's highlands.

As climate challenges intensify, these early successes suggest a promising future for locally led agricultural innovation. The project demonstrates how "there is a way to generate income at the local level, without the need to migrate," notes Cifuentes. With farmers already planning to replicate these structures in future growing seasons, Guatemala's highland farmers are creating a model for sustainable agriculture that protects both their cultural heritage and their agricultural future. 

Building new floating cover
(left) Project technicians and local producers in Río San Juan community, Aguacatán, Huehuetenango, work together to secure the protective mesh around their floating cover structure — a crucial step that helps create an optimal growing environment. (right) The results of this climate-smart technology in action: healthy tomato plants flourishing under protected cultivation at the UVG site in Sololá. Image credit: Josué Bocel.
Floating cover construction
The improved floating cover design combines durability with efficiency: cement and stone pillars provide a stable foundation, galvanized tubes create a strong framework, and anti-insect netting protects crops from pests while maintaining airflow. These materials represent a significant advance from traditional bamboo structures, offering farmers longer-lasting protection against climate challenges. Image credit: Josué Bocel.

This research is supported by the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Horticulture. For more information on the projects locally led in Central America, visit our website. Want to collaborate? Contact Associate Director, Archie Jarman at rajarman@ucdavis.edu.

Feed the Future visitors
Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Horticulture visitors gather at a demonstration site in Guatemala's highlands, where local farmers showcase their climate-smart floating cover structures. The site visits facilitate knowledge exchange between indigenous farmers, researchers, and development practitioners, advancing climate adaptation strategies across the region. Image credit: Heather Hayashi.

Article Type

Blog

Countries

Guatemala

Crop

Tomatoes