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Second DSEDT Open Day ACP House, 11 October 2011

Join us at the Second ACP Open Day to learn about the initiatives and strategies for promoting sustainable agriculture and climate change adaptation. Discover how weather risk management and value-addition can support ACP stakeholders. Visit our website for more information.

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Second DSEDT Open Day ACP House, 11 October 2011

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  1. Second DSEDT Open Day ACP House, 11 October 2011

  2. Basic Facts about 3ACP • Duration : Sept 2007 to Dec 2011 • Overall Budget: € 45 M, of which € 15 M earmarked in support of EU-Africa Partnership on Cotton • A pilot programme covering 6 ACP regions: Pacific, Caribbean, Central Africa, West Africa, Eastern & Southern Africa (ESA) • Funds channelled in two tranches through 5 partner int’l organisations = implementing agencies

  3. Major Problems addressed Problem Area • Dependency • Absence of agrstrategies • Smallholders are poorlyorganised • Poormarketfunctioning and Imperfect information • Limited access to market-basedrisk management tools Required Action • Promote value-addition and diversification • Encourage development of participatorystrategies (or adherence to existingones) • Support capacity-building of producer organisations • Enhancemarketfunctioning & improve information flows • Facilitateinterest in and access to RM tools

  4. Expected Results • Commoditychainstakeholders have the capacity to develop, adapt & implementsustainablestrategies • Strategicpriorities are effectivelyimplemented • Market-basedRisk Management instruments are introduced and their use increased • Complementarities and synergies of partner IOs and other programme partners are harnessed to the benefit of ACP stakeholders

  5. Link between Agriculture and CC • Reduction in crop yields & in agr productivity • Increased incidence of pest attacks • Exacerbation of climatic events (droughts, floods, hurricanes) • Programme Contribution : • Adaptation Measures • Promoting GAP (Good Agricultural Practices) - € 1.94M • Promoting Weather Risk Management - € 1.2M

  6. FFS approaches for cotton and horticulture (West Africa – Senegal, Mali, B. Faso, Benin; East Africa: Kenya, ) Cotton farming systems: 18, 620 farmers and 423 trainers trained in IPPM Horticulture: 1,300 farmers and 86 trainers trained Preliminary evaluation show reduction in cost of crop protection by 70% (Mali) Uptake of IPPM by ministries, ginners, FO Integrated Production & Pest Management (IPPM): An Example of GAP

  7. 5000 5.0 4.5 4500 4.0 4000 Mali Cotton Production - FFS and Non-FFS 3.5 3500 3.0 3000 n=65 2.5 2500 Organic Amendments Kg/ha Pesticide Quantity L/ha 2.0 2000 1.5 1500 1.0 1000 0.5 500 0 0 Non FFS Non FFS IPPM

  8. WeatherRiskManagment • Agricultural risk plays a predominant role in the vulnerability profile of low income countries • In most developing countries, traditional community risk management methods do not provide effective protection against large and catastrophic losses, which often stem from climate change • Need for mechanisms that transfer agricultural risk from affected communities • Innovations in agricultural insurance, more specifically, weather index insurance provide such mechanisms

  9. WeatherRiskManagment • Supply chain risk assessments: • Cotton (Burkina Faso, Mozambique); Coffee (Cameroon, Uganda, Jamaica, Haiti); horticulture (Kenya); rice (Guyana) • Training: • On designing index based agricultural insurance (Caribbean, East Africa) • Capacity Transfer: • Partnership with College of Insurance of Kenya • Training of EAFCA trainers • Training of CAFAN leaders

  10. Visit our Website: www.euacpcommodities.eu

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