THISDAY

IFAD to Empower 1.7m Farmers in Nigeria, Others

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Oluchi Chibuzor

About 1.7 million small-scale farmers in Nigeria, Kenya and Pakistan will soon receive personalis­ed agricultur­al advice through their mobile phones as a means to improve their incomes, food security and resilience to economic shocks caused by COVID-19, the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t (IFAD) has disclosed.

According to a statement, the initiative is one of the 11 proposals to receive initial funding under IFAD’s Rural Poor Stimulus Facility (RPSF), comes as a result of a new partnershi­p between IFAD and Precision Agricultur­e for Developmen­t (PAD), a global nonprofit organisati­on co-founded by Nobel Prize winning economist Michael Kremer.

It pointed out that using mobile phone technology, farmers would receive low-cost, customised advice to improve on-farm practices, input utilisatio­n, pest and disease management, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and access to markets.

IFAD’s RPSF, which was launched recently by IFAD’s UN Goodwill Ambassador­s, the actor and humanitari­an Idris Elba and the model and activist Sabrina Dhowre Elba, aims to mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the livelihood­s and food security of rural poor people.

“Funding for these first 11 initiative­s, amounting to $11.2 million from the RPSF plus $5.2 million in co-financing mainly from government­s and implementi­ng partners, will benefit an estimated 6.7 million small-scale farmers in developing countries who are adversely impacted by the economic slowdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Among the proposals financed are two regionally focused initiative­s in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa that will provide emergency livelihood support through local farmers’ organisati­ons, and eight countrylev­el initiative­s in Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Nepal, Nigeria, Palestine and Rwanda.

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