Angola and IFAD to promote sustainable agriculture and boost food security in the face of climate change
Rome, 15 July 2020
– The International Fund for Agricultural Development of the
United
Nations (IFAD) today announced support for a new project to boost
agricultural productivity, improve food and nutrition security and build
the resilience of at least 218,000 rural families in Angola who are
vulnerable to climate shocks.
In
Angola, 50 per cent of poor people live in rural areas and mostly
depend on subsistence agriculture. This sector employs 44 per cent of
the population and contributes 5.5 per cent to the country’s GDP.
Improving small-scale agricultural production, productivity and
commercialization is vital to reducing poverty and improving food
security in the rural areas.
The
government of Angola has implemented several development projects to
revitalize the economy. However, more needs to be done to boost the
agriculture sector and provide sustainable livelihoods to vulnerable
poor people in rural areas. The country also has a large food import
bill: US$583 million the first quarter of 2019. Coupled with the decline
in oil revenues in 2015-2016 and rising food costs, these factors have
impelled the government to start promoting economic diversification. In
the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, such steps are more important than
ever.
“If
we want to ensure sustainable food and nutrition security and reduce
Angola’s food import bill, the government must invest massively in the
agriculture sector,” said Robson Mutandi, Country Director for Angola.
“Particular attention to commercializing family farming on a sustainable
basis is critical for the prosperity of Angola.”
The
financing agreement for the Smallholder Resilience Enhancement Project
(SREP) was signed today in Rome by Gilbert F. Houngbo, President of
IFAD, and Maria de Fátima Monteiro Jardim, Ambassador of the Republic of Angola to Italy and Permanent Representative.
This $150 million project will particularly target young people and
women who are vulnerable to climate shocks, aiming to help them to
recover and to build their resilience.
The
project will promote sustainable practices such as the introduction of
drought-tolerant crop varieties, adaptation of cropping calendars and
rainwater harvesting. It will invest in small-scale irrigation,
increased access to water and climate-resilient farming practices.
SREP
will be implemented in seven provinces in arid, semi-arid and sub-humid
agroecological zones - Bengo, Zaire, Uige and Cuanza Norte in the north
and Benguela, Cunene and Namibe in the south. It will also strengthen
the national private sector’s capacity to improve delivery of advisory
and climate information services tailored to family farmers’ needs.
Funding includes a $29.8 million loan from IFAD, as well as cofinancing from the Agence Française de Développement
($42 million) and the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa ($40
million). The Government of Angola is providing $10 million, with a
further $6.5 million contributed by beneficiaries themselves. The
financing gap of $21.7 million will come from IFAD resources or from
other development partners identified during the implementation.
SREP
will also build the capacity of small family farmers in production and
processing through farmer field schools so they can become more
productive. The project will increase their access to markets by linking
them to different private sector actors in value chains.
Furthermore,
appropriate rural infrastructure will be put in place to support
market-oriented production, and to enable efficient delivery of surplus
production from family farms to markets, allowing small-scale farmers to
sell more and improve their livelihoods.
Livelihood
development, improved nutrition and resilience are all critical areas
for Angola’s food security, and contribute to several Sustainable
Development Goals, including no poverty, zero hunger, gender equality,
climate action and life on land (SDGs 1, 2, 5, 13 and 15).
Since
1990, IFAD has invested $111.8 million in eight rural development
programmes and projects in Angola worth a total of almost $284.6
million. These projects have directly benefited 486,600 rural families.
No comments :
Post a Comment