La Molina, Lima, Peru and Kabul,
Afghanistan
December 5, 2006
Over 3000 tonnes of healthy potato
seed have been produced in Afghanistan in a step towards
developing an efficient and sustainable seed production and
marketing system. The eventual impact of the work will be to
produce more food to reduce hunger, alleviate poverty, improve
living standards of rural people and reduce the area under
illicit crop production.
Potato is the third most important food crop in Afghanistan, but
good quality seed is scarce because of the lack of a formal
seed-producing system and an ineffective informal system. This
is limiting the potential to increase area, productivity and
improve quality of produce.
The International Potato
Center (CIP) in
collaboration with the
International Center for Agriculture Research in the Dry Areas
(ICARDA) and with USAID-RAMP (Rebuilding Agricultural Markets
Program) funding, has recently completed a project in
Afghanistan to produce good quality potato seed for resource
poor farmers by developing in-country seed production programs.
An integrated approach is being used to achieve the goals of
self-sufficiency in seed potato and to ensure its availability
through out the potato producing regions of Afghanistan.
Using a ‘flush out’ approach, CIP initially created a
sustainable seed system in Nangarhar province. Quality potato
seed imported from India and Pakistan was planted by 25
CIP-trained farmer-seed-multipliers. The seed produced was used
in the RAMP-funded project, along with fresh supplies from the
region, to replace the existing unhealthy material farmers were
using. Since 2002, project workers have been disseminating
improved location-specific technologies for healthy seed
production, multiplication and maintenance at farm-level, and
training staff of the Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Husbandry
and Food (MAAHF), farmers and extension workers to use these
technologies. Linkages are being developed to sell good quality
seed in zones that do not produce their own seed. The approach
taken is expected to increase potato production and farm income
substantially by enhanced productivity of quality potatoes.
Thirty five country stores were built to provide an economical
and improved way of seed potato storage with a capacity of 20
tonnes each. Through various training activities, over 20,000
farmers, extension workers, village elders, and staff of other
agencies have directly benefited from project activities. Three
radio programs on potato production and marketing were produced
in collaboration with the Communications Unit of ICARDA,
Afghanistan. These programs were broadcast by more than 50 local
radio stations and reached over an estimated 15 million
listeners.
CIP and ICARDA are jointly working to achieve a targeted
production of 54,000 tonnes of potato seed by 2009 in
Afghanistan in order to hand over the entire potato seed
production program to the MAAHF in the next few years.
Text supplied by Muhammad Arif 1, Moeen-Uddin 1, Mohinder
Singh Kadian 2, Sarath Ilangantileke 2 and Nasrat Wassimi 3
1. CIP-Kabul, Afghanistan
2. CIP Regional Office for South, West and Central Asia
3. ICARDA-Kabul Afghanistan |