Uploaded on:
16/01/2023 15:50
File Size:
11.85 MB
Extension:
jpg
Dimensions:
6184 x 4128 pixels
5 views 14 downloads
ID: 76740
Country: Mauritania
Title: Mauritania - Rural Poor Stimulus Facility (RPSF) - June 2022
Description: The pumps used to extract groundwater for irrigation are largely fueled by diesel, with fuel, deployment and pump maintenance currently accounting for a significant proportion of farmer’s operational costs, making it very difficult for small scale farming to be profitable. Now, select farmers have benefited from the solar panels to operate the water pumps.

Agriculture is central to the economy of Gouraye, like almost all the municipalities in the region. Small producers encounter obstacles to their development, in particular climatic conditions or the lack of logistical means. IFAD’s Rural Poor Stimulus Facility (RPSF) helped reduce the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their farming activities and safeguarded their livelihoods, making sure that weaker groups like youth, women and persons with disabilities were included.

The RPSF was implemented through the Sustainable Management of Natural Resources, Communal Equipment and the Organization of Rural Producers Project (PROGRES) during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. It helped small-scale producers improve their agricultural productivity by ensuring quick access to inputs, such as certified climate-resilient seeds and farming equipment, that were impossible to get because of COVID-related lockdowns and movement restrictions.

Before the pandemic, smallholders could farm only during the rainy winter period, September to February or March, then migrated to the capital Nouakchott, or even further to Senegal or Mali for the rest of the year. But COVID lockdowns brought travelling to a halt, resulting in an extraordinary loss of income. Additional funds granted through the RPSF supplemented the PROGRES project by providing solar panels, water pumps, water towers, bigger pipes and other equipment that make it possible for them to irrigate and cultivate their vegetable crops throughout the year. Now they have doubled their farming season and are proud to show their production of onions, eggplant, carrots, watermelon and other produce even during the dry summer months.

PROGRES aims to improve food security and nutrition, increase the incomes of poor rural households, create jobs and reduce the country's dependence on food imports. Activities target poor rural households with a special focus on women and young people. The people in the region have struggled for years to stop the desert from taking over arable land. Climate change is making things worse.
IFAD is working with communities to create a Great Green Wall to hold back the Sahara Desert.
Size: 11.85 MB; 6184 x 4128 pixels; 524 x 350 mm (print at 300 DPI); 1636 x 1092 mm (screen at 96 DPI);
Show more details: Ibrahima Kebe Diallo
Copyright: ©IFAD/Ibrahima Kebe Diallo
Categories: New from West and Central Africa  
URL: ifad.org