Farming project gets extension, $66M

Dec 29th at 07:58
29-12-2017 07:58:43+07:00

Farming project gets extension, $66M

The government and international funders have committed a further $66 million to a project to increase small farmers’ productivity, after yesterday claiming success in the program’s initial seven-year period.

The renewed program, Tonle Sap Poverty Reduction and Smallholders Development (TSSD), will join a slew of agricultural improvement projects that have now been scheduled over the next several years.

TSSD was started in 2010 with funds from the government, Asian Development Bank (ADB), International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and Finland, totalling $50.85 million, said Sam Chhom Sangha, deputy secretary-general of the Ministry of Agriculture.

Targeting 1,200 smallholder farmer groups in 28 districts in five target provinces – Banteay Meanchey, Siem Reap, Kampong Thom, Kampong Cham and Tbong Khmum – the project had improved the livelihoods of about 60,000 families, Chhom Sangha said.

“Before, I didn’t know anything about [good agricultural practices] or food safety – I only farmed based on traditional ways. Since I joined the project, I learned farming techniques to meet quality standards,” said Prak Thorn, a melon farmer in Siem Reap province’s Banteay Srey district, who joined the project in 2014.

“My customers are confident now and trust only my melons,” he said.

The ministry’s Chhom Sangha said the project’s initial phase would end in February, but thanks to its perceived success, the program would receive an additional $66 million from the government, ADB and IFAD to continue for five more years.

The second stage would expand to two more provinces, Prey Veng and Battambang, and focus more on irrigation, he said.

Meng Sakphouseth, IFAD’s country program officer, said there were many projects joining the sector with similar goals of developing the local horticulture industry.

“The challenges that we address will be production chain and market needs,” Sakphouseth said.

In May, the government and IFAD launched a six-year, $36 million joint project to develop agricultural value chains and help smallholder farmers access markets.

In August, New Zealand offered to provide a $6.5 million grant for a five-year commercial horticulture project aimed at helping small organic fruit and vegetable farmers find local buyers for their products, and in September, a five-year, $17 million initiative was announced by USAID to develop commercial horticulture in rural Cambodia.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Telecom regulator to steer clear of service providers’ price war

After a year of toothless warnings against below-cost mobile deals – which it previously called “suspicious” and “unfair” – the country’s telecommunications...

Agriculture sector has seen its share of empty promises

The promises of Chinese agro-industrial investment have been recurrent: Hyped up by local officials and media outlets, with photographs of handshakes and earnest...

Industrial development plan to boost economy is ‘90%’ on track

Guests inspect a model of the new Kerry Worldbridge Special Economic Zone at the groundbreaking ceremony in 2015 in Kandal.

Malaysia firm to bring Oddar Meanchey onto national power grid

Malaysian-owned power infrastructure provider Pestech (Cambodia) Ltd has won a $26 million job to start on a new electricity project in Cambodia that will see Oddar...

Insiders say new concrete factories not enough to stabilise local sector

Four new Cambodian cement factories are set to come online in the near future, tripling the number of local producers, but insiders and officials this week...

Australian firm expects licence soon for Mondulkiri gold mine

Australian mining firm Emerald Resources announced yesterday that it was making positive progress towards full licensing and funding of its Okvau gold mine project...

EU firm sets plan for local rubber factory

Socfin Cambodia, the local branch of a Europe-based international rubber producing company that currently operates a 7,500-hectare rubber plantation in Mondulkiri...

Government fails to recoup on rubber expenses

Despite a 31 percent increase in Cambodian rubber exports during the first 11 months of this year, the Ministry of Agriculture is failing to recoup on expenses it...

Poipet rental factory geared toward electronics opens

Techno Park Poipet – a wholly owned rental factory operated and built by Japan’s Toyota Tsusho Corporation, the distribution arm of Japanese auto giant Toyota –...

Local users take tentative steps into the digital world

A new study by global market research firm Kantar TNS has shown that Cambodians are both increasingly adventurous and sceptical internet users, becoming more...


MOST READ


Back To Top