Sao Tome and Principe and IFAD partner to improve nutrition and incomes in face of climate change
Rome, 13 February 2020
– The International Fund for Agricultural Development of
the United
Nations (IFAD) today announced support for a new project to increase
incomes, improve food and nutrition security and build the resilience of
at least 34,800 rural farmers of Sao Tome and Principe, an island
country highly affected by climate change.
Rising
sea levels and climate disturbances put the poor rural people of the
country at risk, impacting its agriculture and fisheries.
Micronutrient
deficiency rates in Sao Tome and Principe are also alarming, with 96
per cent of preschool children and 18 per cent of girls and pregnant
women suffering from vitamin A deficiencies. The malnutrition rate for
children under five is more than 17 per cent.
To
address these issues, the financing agreement for the
Commercialization, Agricultural Production Nutrition Project (COMPRAN)
was signed today by Donal Brown, Associate Vice-President of IFAD,
Programme Management Department and Osvaldo Tavares dos Santos Vaz, Minister of Finance of the Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe.
With
69 per cent of the young people in Sao Tome and Principe unemployed,
this €19.2 million programme will target young people, aiming for at
least 50 per cent. It will contribute to livelihood development,
improved nutrition and resilience, all of which are critical areas for
the country to achieve food security, as well as meeting several
Sustainable Development Goals, including no poverty, zero hunger, gender
equality and climate action (SDGs 1, 2, 5 and 13).
Funding
includes an €0.9 million loan and €3.8 million grant from IFAD. In
addition, the Government of Sao Tome and Principe is providing €0.4
million, with a further €0.5 million contributed by beneficiaries
themselves and significant cofinancing from other development partners.
“COMPRAN
is an innovative project that will also strengthen capacities of key
rural public and private institutions in the country to catalyse and
well manage investments and strengthen public-private and producer
partnerships, at both central and decentralized levels. This will ensure
the continuity and the sustainability of the gains of the former
Smallholder Commercial Agriculture Project that registered huge
achievements and impact on the livelihoods of rural populations through
increased incomes,” said Emime Ndihokubwayo, Country Director for Sao
Tome and Principe.
The
project will promote the economic inclusion of small-scale producers in
value chains commodities such as crop, livestock and fishing.
Innovative climate change mitigation and adaption measures will be
introduced, particularly in irrigation and agroforestry. The project
will also invest in post-harvest infrastructure and technologies to
minimise food loss.
COMPRAN
will build the capacity of small-scale farmers in production and
processing so that they become more competitive. It will also increase
their access to markets by linking them to different actors in the
target value chains. Appropriate rural infrastructure will be put in
place to support market-oriented production, and to enable efficient
delivery of surplus production from small farms to markets, allowing
farm families to sell more and improve their livelihoods.
The
project will be implemented nationwide and will fund 35 business plans
of cooperatives, promote 1,500 microprojects for food and nutritional
security and income-generating activities, and support 700 youth
microenterprises initiatives.
Other
important activities include preparing or updating the land registry to
identify abandoned lands so that they can be distributed to women,
young people, or persons with disabilities who can be included in
productive agricultural activities.
Since
1985, IFAD has invested more than US$31.7 million in seven rural
development programmes and projects in Sao Tome and Principe worth a
total of almost $70 million. These interventions have directly benefited
36,520 rural families.
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