PADDY production in Dakawa Ward in Mvomero District, Morogoro Region has almost tripled, following the financial support extended to producers under the Private Agricultural Sector Support’s (PASS) guarantee.
“We have boosted our productivity from
15 bags per acre to between 35 and 45 bags,” Mr Evodis Mlokozi, a paddy
grower at Dakawa Irrigation Scheme in Morogoro told journalists who
visited the project, recently.
The peasant said he was currently
producing 45 bags of rice per acre, his new target being to produce 60
bags. Interviewed farmers attributed the increased productivity to PASS
guarantee, which has given them access to bank loans to invest in their
farms.
“I started growing rice many years ago
but with low productivity,” said Robert Materu, recalling the year he
harvested eight bags from 12 acres. Mr Grayson Mangula said the
financial support has enabled farmers to prepare their farms and plant
timely as well as adhering to all recommended good agricultural
practices.
“With the bank loans, we can plant on
time, apply fertilizers and pesticides for the bumper harvests,” said Mr
Mangula. The interviewees, mostly Jikwamue Dakawa Farmers Group
members, urged fellow peasants to join the group to benefit from the
PASS guaranteed loans.
Jikwamue is one of the ten groups under the rice growers’ cooperative society, which started in 2006.
During the 2015/16 farming season, 30
Jikwamue group members applied for and secured a 583m/- loan from CRDB
Bank through PASS guarantee to intensify paddy production in Dakawa
scheme. The loan brought to 1.18bn/- the total amount the group has so
far received under the PASS arrangement.
The loan per farmer averaged at 7.7m/-
for the 2013/14 season before soaring to 11m/- and 21m/- for the 2014/15
and 2015/16 farming seasons, respectively. The farmers use the loans
for farm preparations, input purchases and payment for other farming
costs and storage expenses.
Agricultural Extension Officer at Dakawa
Augusta Matembo said the paddy growers at the area have huge potential
of eradicating poverty among themselves through modern agronomic
practices, with remarkable increase in yields.
“With these loans, it has become easy
for farmers to heed the professional advice...to plant timely, apply
fertilizers and pesticides,” said Ms Matembo, asking PASS and its
partner banks to extend the services to other needy areas.
PASS, a non-banking financial
organisation that facilitates provision of business development and
financial services, was established in 2000 under the Agricultural
Sector Programme Support.
It operated as a project until 2007 when
it was registered as a trust, with similar mission to facilitate
commercialization of subsistence farming. It as well operates as credit
guarantee to commercial farmers and agri-businesses that run small and
medium enterprises (SMEs).
Its main focus is to facilitate value chain financing, covering all needs of agro-entrepreneurs.
No comments :
Post a Comment