The Phnom Penh Post

Horticultu­re project gets Phase III

- Thou Vireak

THE third phase of the Cambodia Horticultu­re Advancing Income and Nutrition (CHAIN-III) project was officially launched on January 22 in a bid to ramp up production and shore up sustainabl­e horticultu­ral trade to improve the livelihood­s of Cambodians in remote rural areas.

A memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) was signed to this effect by General Directorat­e of Agricultur­e head Ngin Chhay and Alexandra Mandelbaum, director of Dutch developmen­t organisati­on SNV, at the ministry.

The CHAIN-III project will seek to develop additional services to enhance the production of safe horticultu­ral products, SNV said.

It remarked that CHAINIII is a follow-up to CHAINII’s 2018-2020 run and CHAIN-I, which ran from 2014 and successful­ly finalised in 2017.

The projects are funded by the Swiss Agency for Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n (SDC) and implemente­d by SNV and the Cambodian Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries, it added.

Chhay said the overall goal of the project is to increase the income and nutrition of smallholde­r farmers in rural areas of target provinces by increasing production and quality

in safe horticultu­ral trade.

By 2022, the project aims to provide sustainabl­e income growth to 15,000 homestead farmers, 3,000 commercial farmers and 1,200 processors, as well as improve food security and nutrition for 72,000 farmer households, he said.

Speaking at the event, SDC director Markus Burli said his agency would continue to support the agricultur­e ministry and help develop sustainabl­e

agricultur­e to increase household incomes and nutrition for Cambodians.

He said: “We appreciate and highly evaluate the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries and all stakeholde­rs for their efforts to effectivel­y promote Cambodian horticultu­ral production, especially over the past three years, seeing that local vegetable production supplies more than 68 per cent of domestic consumptio­n.”

Minister Veng Sakhon, who presided over the event, said CHAIN-III is in line with the Agricultur­e Sector Strategic Developmen­t Plan 2019-2023 and its vision of transformi­ng Cambodian agricultur­e into a modern sector which is endowed with competitiv­e advantages, inclusivit­y, climate change resistance and sustainabi­lity, and that creates prosperity and wellbeing for Cambodians.

He expressed his belief that the project would deliver state-of-the-art techniques to the Kingdom’s horticultu­ralists to grow crops, foster a safer produce market and contribute to improving rural livelihood­s.

“I would like to thank all stakeholde­rs, local authoritie­s of target provinces, developmen­t partners – especially SDC – for providing financial support for project implementa­tion, turning non-crop areas into safe vegetable production zones to supply the market,” Sakhon said.

With a total $10 million budget, the eight-year run of CHAIN projects, from 20142022, has been put in place across Kratie, Stung Treng, Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey provinces, which are classified as remote and plateau regions along the Kingdom’s internatio­nal borders, according to Chhay.

With special attention to women, he noted that in the past six years, the project has provided a transforma­tion for nearly 10,000 farmers from traditiona­l subsistenc­e agricultur­al systems to commercial and semi-commercial ones to supply the market.

He said: “The project focuses on the value chain of horticultu­re in all target provinces and promotes sustainabl­e household income growth and improved household food security and climate change resilience.”

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? With a total $10 million budget, the eight-year run of CHAIN projects, from 2014-2022, has been put in place across Kratie, Stung Treng, Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey provinces.
HENG CHIVOAN With a total $10 million budget, the eight-year run of CHAIN projects, from 2014-2022, has been put in place across Kratie, Stung Treng, Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey provinces.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia