At the request of The
World Vegetable Center
(AVRDC) in Thailand, seed firm
Seminis has donated nearly 70,000 packets of vegetable seed
to support a tsunami recovery effort aimed at supplementing food
supplies with garden-grown vegetables.
The seeds will be included in
about 25,000 garden kits of farm tools, irrigation supplies,
fertilizer and technical instructions destined for families in
Sri Lanka and Indonesia, according to organizers at AVRDC.
Although arable land is scarce in the tsunami-affected areas,
vegetables can be grown successfully on small parcels. Local
markets are also available for families to sell their surplus
food. The kits can plant and irrigate about 100 square meters.
"Vegetable production in home
gardens can generate income, diversify diets and help ensure a
sustainable food supply," said Dr. Thomas Lumpkin, Director
General at AVRDC, a not-for-profit agricultural institute which
coordinated a similar program in Bangladesh after devastating
floods in 1991.
The seed supplied by Seminis --
hot pepper, cucumber and butternut squash -- are food staples
and were widely planted prior to the disaster. The varieties
chosen are well adapted to tropical climates, mature relatively
quickly (as few as 60 days), and continue to produce fruit over
an extended time.
"Our employees were deeply
affected by this tragedy and we are very proud to join the
agricultural industry's rebuilding effort," said Seminis
President Bruno Ferrari. "While emergency food and supplies have
been effective at meeting the short-term needs of victims,
highly perishable items such as vegetables have been difficult
to get to tsunami-affected areas due to damaged roads and
infrastructure. The best long-term solution -- one that Seminis
has repeated in many regions around the world -- is to give
local families and farmers the supplies and support they need to
help themselves," said Mr. Ferrari.
The AVRDC's relief program is
also supported by the Asia & Pacific Seed Association,
International Development Enterprises, Sri Lankan Ministry of
Agriculture, Indonesian Vegetable Research Institute and the
Indonesian Institute of Agriculture and Agroforestry Research
and Development, among others.
To donate funds to AVRDC,
contact Dr. Markus Kaiser, Grant Development Officer at
kaiser@avrdc.org.
ABOUT AVRDC
The World Vegetable Center
(AVRDC) is a not-for-profit international agricultural research
institute founded in 1971. It works to reduce poverty and
malnutrition in developing countries through improved production
and consumption of vegetables.
ABOUT SEMINIS
Seminis Inc. is the world's
largest developer, producer and marketer of vegetable seeds. Its
products are designed to reduce the need for agricultural
chemicals, increase crop yield, reduce spoilage, offer longer
shelf life, and create better tasting foods and foods with
better nutritional content. Seminis has established a worldwide
presence and global distribution network that spans 150
countries and territories. Most recently, Seminis donated
vegetable seeds to growers in Jamaica, whose farms were
destroyed by Hurricanes Charley and Ivan this past September.