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Food Tank recognises farming initiatives

Source:Food Tank Release Date:2013-10-16 228
Food & Beverage
The organisation cites programmes that are worth expanding on a global scale

To celebrate the winners of Food Sovereignty Food Prize and World Food Day, Food Tank says it has chosen the following initiatives which provide family farmers support in order to produce healthy crops that feed their communities.

1. The Indigenous Plants for Health and Wellness Program (IPHWP) was created by the Republic of the Philippines’ Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR). The programme studies Philippine environmental biodiversity, focusing on indigenous food crops to combat malnutrition. Throughout the research process, BAR collects species varieties in an effort to conserve the country’s rich plant varieties. With data, preservation, and research, BAR works toward building awareness of the importance of nutrient-rich indigenous plants and creates new markets for local production.

2. In Kenya, Mary Abukutsa-Onyango, professor of horticulture at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT), has helped farmers cultivate indigenous crops including amaranth, black nightshade, and Bambara nuts for consumption. Abukutsa-Onyango’s project also helps instruct farmers how to preserve these crops, once harvested, to help maintain maximum nutritional value.

3. Fundatia ADEPT is a biodiversity conservation organization in Romania helping local farmers use agroecological management practices to take care of their land, including cultivating indigenous species of plants and animals. Fundatia ADEPT works with individuals, communities, universities, and other governments to conserve agricultural ecosystems in the Transylvania region, and cultivate and protect more than 50 native species of edible plants.

4. As an original founding farm of the Navajo Family Farms (NFF) project, the North Leupp Family Farm (NLFF) helps improve the health and well-being of native North American peoples through sustainable agriculture and indigenous foods. NLFF advocates for the cultural revitalisation of the Diné community, focusing on farming techniques and crop varieties native to central Arizona. NLFF also teaches community members, particularly youth, about the significance of native plants and crops in traditional culinary arts through educational programmes.

5. The University of Canberra received a grant for nearly AU$800,000 (approximately US$780,000) from the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research to study the practices of women smallholder vegetable farmers in Papua New Guinea. The purpose of the project is to provide education and resources to enable these farmers, whose vegetable cultivation is usually restricted to household use, to sell their crops commercially.

Related link: Standing with family farmers on  Air Zoom Vomero 14

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