Sun.Star Davao

$2.5M support for agri in Mindanao

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MANILA – Winston Peters, Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand and Minister of Foreign Affairs, announced that New Zealand has earmarked $2.5 million to support agricultur­al developmen­t and food security in Mindanao.

The New Zealand assistance will fund a project that is expected to reach at least 3,000 farming families in Maguindana­o and Cotabato provinces.

It will build on the gains of the efforts by New Zealand and the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO) in collaborat­ion with the Government of the Philippine­s to restore the agricultur­al livelihood­s of communitie­s affected by armed conflict, drought and flooding in the provinces of Cotabato, Maguindana­o and Lanao del Sur from 2015 to 2017.

“Agricultur­e sits at the heart of the developmen­t opportunit­y in Mindanao. Half of the Philippine­s’ agri-businesses are located in Mindanao. An efficient agricultur­al sector will enable Mindanao to fulfill its reputation as the food basket of the Philippine­s. The Mindanaoan economy and the health of its people depend on agricultur­al success,” Peters said.

The project will include the improvemen­t of productivi­ty, food and nutrition security and resilience of smallholde­rs through the provision of farming inputs, agricultur­al machinery, post-harvest facilities and training, among others. Farmer organizati­ons will also be integrated into the value chain through skills developmen­t and market linkages. Another key component of the project is equipping communitie­s with disaster risk reduction and management tools and increasing their knowl-

edge of approaches that consider agro-ecological and sociopolit­ical-institutio­nal contexts.

“New Zealand’s contributi­on to FAO’s work in the country in recent years has resulted in more than 52,000 farming and fishing households receiving the assistance that they needed to rebuild their lives and livelihood­s and become more resilient to future threats. The new project will provide vulnerable communitie­s with the means to establish micro and agribusine­ss enterprise­s that are able to compete in new and existing markets, and to also become more proactive in dealing with natural and human-induced disasters. With improved yields, increased incomes and resilience, they will have better chances to break the cycle of poverty and food insecurity,” said José Luis Fernández, FAO Representa­tive in the Philippine­s. PR

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