ERITREA: CEREAL AND LEGUME SEEDS TO SAVE 2003 CROP
Press Release AFR/627 SAG/132 |
ERITREA: CEREAL AND LEGUME SEEDS TO SAVE 2003 CROP
New FAO Project Helps Drought-Affected Farmers
(Reissued as received.)
ROME, 30 May (FAO) –- The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is helping Eritrean farmers restore their productive capacity through the distribution of cereal and legume seeds for the 2003 cropping season.
The drought of 2002 -- the worst in 10 years -- severely weakened the productive capacity of farmers and affected all regions, including Debub and Gash Barka, which constitute the breadbasket of Eritrea.
The overall harvest of cereal crops realized in 2002 represents only 11 per cent of the expected annual cereal harvest.
In many regions, the quantity of wheat and barley harvests was lower than the amounts of seed required to be saved for planting the 2003 crop.
Farmers also still suffer from the impact of the border war with Ethiopia. They have little cash left to buy seeds. Often, their limited seed stock becomes the family's only remaining source of food.
In Eritrea, the food situation is alarming as nearly two thirds of the country's population of 3.4 million people face severe food shortages. Of these, an estimated 1.4 million need emergency food assistance.
A $400,000 TCP Project
Under its Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP), the FAO just launched a new $400,000 project in Eritrea. The organization will provide technical assistance services and inputs to help rural communities resume farming.
The FAO will distribute 400 tonnes of cereal and legume seeds to about 30,000 families. This will enable about 15,000 hectares of land to be cultivated, ultimately yielding about 12,000 tonnes of food worth about $5 million.
The emergency provision of cereal and legume seeds project starts in June 2003 and should end by January 2004. It complements the efforts of a Swedish-funded seeds distribution project in the Debub and Gash Barka regions.
A Huge Gap
The calculated cereal and legume seed requirement for Eritrea is 16,247 tonnes, covering wheat, barley, sorghum, finger millet, peal millet, maize and teff, being the main cereals, and chickpea, horse bean and sesame, being the main nutrition supplements.
In Eritrea, the FAO is working in close cooperation with non-governmental organizations. So far, the FAO, non-governmental organizations and donors have pledged or provided 5,640 tonnes. The Ministry of Agriculture of Eritrea has already purchased 2,862 tonnes.
Taking into account the 20 per cent of seeds (3,250 tonnes) to be raised by farmers themselves, a gap of 6,333 tonnes remains to be filled.
Some further 2,000 tonnes of seeds are likely to be purchased by the Ministry of Agriculture. This leaves a huge gap of 4,000 tonnes to be filled.
Unless urgent assistance is provided to bridge the gap, about 100,000 farmers would remain without seeds and be unable to resume farming when the rains return in June 2003.
Link: Technical Cooperation Department: http://www.fao.org/tc/
Web version: http://www.fao.org/english/newsroom/; contact: Pierre Antonios, FAO Information Officer; e-mail: pierre.antonios@fao.org;
tel. (+39) 06 570 53473
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