Roots of Resilience: A Village Reimagines Waste as Wealth
02 February 2026
“We are now seeing value in things we would’ve thrown away,”
Phaivanh Sidavong, 55, beams with pride, her voice cheerful as she guides us to her home in the peaceful Huat Village, nestled in the tranquil Kham District of Xiengkhouang Province. As she walks, her enthusiasm is palpable—this is more than just a story of change; it’s a testament to resilience and innovation in a community that has discovered a new path to prosperity.
Huat Village, a tight-knit community known for its rice and corn production, has undergone a remarkable transformation in the past year. Once scattered with discarded rice straw and dried corn cobs, these materials now have new life. Each house in the village has turquoise sacks filled with dried corn cobs carefully stacked under the stilts. A stark contrast to a year ago when these leftovers would have simply been burned—wasted—without a second thought.
For generations, families in Huat Village, like many rural communities in Laos, relied on rice and corn farming as their main source of income. After the harvest, the waste—rice straw and dried corn cobs—would be burned, the quickest and cheapest way to dispose of them.
This practice not only caused harmful emissions, disrupting the serene beauty of the area, but it also posed environmental and health risks, a concern shared by lecturers at Souphanouvong University’s Faculty of Agriculture.
“There’s a cost to the environment, and to us,” says Dr. Nouphone Manivanh, a university lecturer and member of the project team. “Every year, even in the city of Luang Prabang, the smoke fills the air, covering the beauty of the landscape. It’s a cycle we needed to break.”
Enter innovation. In a Small-Grants Programme- supported initiative, eight families, including Phaivanh’s, were introduced to sustainable alternatives. Instead of discarding the waste, they learned to grow oyster mushrooms, ferment animal feed using rice straws, and even make charcoal from corn cobs. The results were nothing short of revolutionary. The once-neglected agricultural waste has become a new source of income for the village.
Phaivanh, with her contagious laughter and warm spirit, remembers when her neighbor approached her, eager to learn how they could grow mushrooms too. “We’re like one big family here,” she says. “We help each other. When we’re packing the rice straw into bags or waiting for the mushrooms to bloom, we’re all together, lending a hand.”
Though the mushroom-growing project is still in its early stages, the impact is clear. Unlike traditional rice farming, which yields only two harvests a year, mushrooms provide a much quicker return. Phaivanh can now sell up to 40 kilos of mushrooms per month, at 50,000 LAK per kilo. Each pod can yield 3 to 4 rounds of mushrooms before the spores run out, far outpacing the income from rice farming.
The community’s success has sparked a ripple effect. The villagers are no longer just surviving—they’re thriving. For Phaivanh and many others, this transformation is more than financial; it’s a deep sense of pride and achievement. “We’ve turned something we used to burn into something we can sell, something we can be proud of,” she says, her smile wide. Phaivanh even mentioned that recently, introduced by her niece, she has embraced digital opportunities and started taking mushroom orders from her friends on Facebook!
In a village once known for its agricultural waste, the people of Huat Village have found new value in what was once discarded. Their story is not just one of sustainability but of hope and possibility—proof that with a little innovation and a lot of community spirit, even the most ordinary materials can be turned into extraordinary opportunities.
Written by
Aksonethip Somvorachit
RCO
Associate Development Coordination Officer, Programme Communications and Advocacy