SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 2
Download to read offline
Photo: C. Pye -Smith/ILRI
     STORIES
     OF CHANGE



                                                                                                                                                                   The power of knowledge and “value chains”
                                                                                                                                                                   Misku and her husband are among tens of thousands of farmers to benefit from a project which
                                                                                                                                                                   has helped them to improve the productivity of their livestock and crops and – crucially – market
                                                                                                                                                                   their produce more effectively. Funded by the Canadian International Development Agency
                                                                                                                                                                   (CIDA) and managed by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on behalf of the
                                                                                                                                                                   Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Improving Productivity and Market Success
                                                                                                                                                                   of Ethiopian Farmers (IPMS) project was launched in 2006.

                                                                                                                                                                   Goma, where Misku and her family live, is one of 10 districts where the project operates. The early
                                                                                                                                                                   stages involved the identification of crops and livestock which could benefit from activities to
                                                                                                                                                                   improve production and marketing. This followed lengthy consultations with farmers and local
                                                                                                                                                                   government staff. In Goma the focus has been on improving ‘value chains’ – linking production,


Ethiopia:
                                                                                                                                                                   the supply of farm inputs and the markets – for coffee, poultry, honey, fruit and sheep.

                                                                                                                                                                   "Many farmers were keen to develop sheep fattening, but they didn't have the knowledge or skills to
                                                                                                                                                                   improve production,” explains Yisehak Baredo, the project’s Research and Development Officer in

Sheep-fattening transforms lives                                                                                                                                   Goma. “Their sheep were in poor health, and it took them up to a year to fatten them." Misku's
                                                                                                                                                                   experience was typical: she used to keep just one sheep, whose only food supplement was
                                                                                                                                                                   kitchen scraps, and she made hardly any money fattening its lambs.

                                                                                                                                                                   In 2008, the project provided training on sheep fattening for Misku and 119 other farmers. They
                                                                                                                                                                   learned, among other things, about the importance of providing their animals with protein-rich
                                                                                                                                                                   food supplements and how to keep them in good health. Such was the success of the first
                                                                                                                                                                   training program that the project repeated the exercise for 92 farmers a year later.


When asked what life was like a decade ago, Misku Abafaris immediately says: "In
those days I was never exposed to any new ideas, any new approaches." Then, after more                                                                             Microfinancing: a critical part
consideration, the 40-year old mother of six turns to practical matters. "I used to spend
most of my time caring for my children and preparing food. And I’d look after our cow and help      Science for a food secure future                               None of this would have been possible without access to credit, which was provided through a
my husband when the crops needed weeding."                                                                                                                         local microfinance institution. Talk to any of the farmers who benefited and they’ll tell you in
                                                                                                                                                                   great detail precisely how they spent their first loans. Misku borrowed 1500 birr (US$115). With
In short, her daily routine in Gudeta, a small village some 30 minutes’ walk from a tarmac                                                                         this she bought five young sheep, a supply of cotton-seed meal, life insurance for herself and
road, was little different from that of earlier generations of women in Ethiopia’s Oromiya                                                                         insurance for her five sheep, and de-wormers and other veterinary medicines. Three months later,
Region. There were good years, when the coffee harvest was plentiful, and bad years,                                                                               she sold the fattened sheep and paid back the loan, leaving her a net profit of 1200 birr (US$90) –   Story prepared by
when the coffee failed or drought shrivelled their food crops.                                                                                                     a considerable sum of money in one of the poorest countries in the world. Subsequent fattening
                                                                                                                                                                   cycles have provided her with similar profit margins.
But new ideas and new approaches, so lacking in the past, have recently helped to
transform their lives. Their most obvious differences can be seen in the fields below the                                                                          So is her story unusual? Yes and no. Yes, in the sense that she is a strong and respected leader,
village, where half a dozen handsome sheep are being fattened for the market.                                                                                      and the group of 30 smallholders which she chairs was immediately able to repay its loans in full
                                                                                                                                                                   – something several other groups failed to achieve. As a result, the microfinance institution has
                                                                                                                                                                   been happy to provide further loans. And no, in the sense that many other farmers have made a
                                                                                                                                                                   success of fattening their sheep and increasing their income. Over four out of five who received
Sheep fattening: simple, yet effective                                                                                                                             training shortened the fattening period to just three months.                                         a CGIAR
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Consortium
"With the profits I've made from my sheep, I've been able to buy a Boran heifer, which will yield                                                                                                                                                                        Research Center
                                                                                                                                                                   "With the profits I’ve made from the sheep, we've built an extension to our house and bought a
much more milk than our local breed of cow," says Misku, "and last year, when we didn’t get a                                                                                                                                                                            CGIAR is a global research
                                                                                                                                                                   high-yielding Boran cow," says Suchare Abamaliky, one of Misku's neighbours. Musa Kadir, who          partnership for a food
coffee harvest, we still made enough money from the sheep to pay all our household                                                                                 belongs to the same peasant association, has used the profits from his sheep to pay school fees       secure future. Its science
expenses." She’s particularly proud of the fact that her sheep-fattening business has paid                                                                         for his children. ”I'm now earning as much money in three months as I used to make in a year from     is carried out by the 15
for her eldest daughter, now 21 years old, to live and study in the nearby town of Agora.             I'm now earning                                              the sale of coffee beans," he says. He has ambitious plans to expand the number of sheep he           research centers of the
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         CGIAR Consortium in
                                                                                                      as much money                                                fattens, and he's also begun to raise avocado and mango seedlings, having observed the                collaboration with
"Misku’s forgotten to tell you about the chairs we're sitting on," says Abafaris Abamaliky, her                                                                    activities of one of his neighbours.
husband. "It was the money from the sheep that paid for the timber and the carpentry. And it          in three months                                                                                                                                                    hundreds of partner
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         organizations.
paid for the wooden box where I now keep my clothes and my private things." The pride he              as I used to make                                            This is the way new ideas are beginning to spread, across hedges and fields, from farmer to           www.cgiar.org
takes in his wife's achievement is plain to see.                                                                                                                   farmer.
                                                                                                      in a year...                                                                                                                                                       M A R C H 2012
Photo: C. Pye -Smith/ILRI
     STORIES
     OF CHANGE



                                                                                                                                                                   The power of knowledge and “value chains”
                                                                                                                                                                   Misku and her husband are among tens of thousands of farmers to benefit from a project which
                                                                                                                                                                   has helped them to improve the productivity of their livestock and crops and – crucially – market
                                                                                                                                                                   their produce more effectively. Funded by the Canadian International Development Agency
                                                                                                                                                                   (CIDA) and managed by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on behalf of the
                                                                                                                                                                   Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Improving Productivity and Market Success
                                                                                                                                                                   of Ethiopian Farmers (IPMS) project was launched in 2006.

                                                                                                                                                                   Goma, where Misku and her family live, is one of 10 districts where the project operates. The early
                                                                                                                                                                   stages involved the identification of crops and livestock which could benefit from activities to
                                                                                                                                                                   improve production and marketing. This followed lengthy consultations with farmers and local
                                                                                                                                                                   government staff. In Goma the focus has been on improving ‘value chains’ – linking production,


Ethiopia:
                                                                                                                                                                   the supply of farm inputs and the markets – for coffee, poultry, honey, fruit and sheep.

                                                                                                                                                                   "Many farmers were keen to develop sheep fattening, but they didn't have the knowledge or skills to
                                                                                                                                                                   improve production,” explains Yisehak Baredo, the project’s Research and Development Officer in

Sheep-fattening transforms lives                                                                                                                                   Goma. “Their sheep were in poor health, and it took them up to a year to fatten them." Misku's
                                                                                                                                                                   experience was typical: she used to keep just one sheep, whose only food supplement was
                                                                                                                                                                   kitchen scraps, and she made hardly any money fattening its lambs.

                                                                                                                                                                   In 2008, the project provided training on sheep fattening for Misku and 119 other farmers. They
                                                                                                                                                                   learned, among other things, about the importance of providing their animals with protein-rich
                                                                                                                                                                   food supplements and how to keep them in good health. Such was the success of the first
                                                                                                                                                                   training program that the project repeated the exercise for 92 farmers a year later.


When asked what life was like a decade ago, Misku Abafaris immediately says: "In
those days I was never exposed to any new ideas, any new approaches." Then, after more                                                                             Microfinancing: a critical part
consideration, the 40-year old mother of six turns to practical matters. "I used to spend
most of my time caring for my children and preparing food. And I’d look after our cow and help      Science for a food secure future                               None of this would have been possible without access to credit, which was provided through a
my husband when the crops needed weeding."                                                                                                                         local microfinance institution. Talk to any of the farmers who benefited and they’ll tell you in
                                                                                                                                                                   great detail precisely how they spent their first loans. Misku borrowed 1500 birr (US$115). With
In short, her daily routine in Gudeta, a small village some 30 minutes’ walk from a tarmac                                                                         this she bought five young sheep, a supply of cotton-seed meal, life insurance for herself and
road, was little different from that of earlier generations of women in Ethiopia’s Oromiya                                                                         insurance for her five sheep, and de-wormers and other veterinary medicines. Three months later,
Region. There were good years, when the coffee harvest was plentiful, and bad years,                                                                               she sold the fattened sheep and paid back the loan, leaving her a net profit of 1200 birr (US$90) –   Story prepared by
when the coffee failed or drought shrivelled their food crops.                                                                                                     a considerable sum of money in one of the poorest countries in the world. Subsequent fattening
                                                                                                                                                                   cycles have provided her with similar profit margins.
But new ideas and new approaches, so lacking in the past, have recently helped to
transform their lives. Their most obvious differences can be seen in the fields below the                                                                          So is her story unusual? Yes and no. Yes, in the sense that she is a strong and respected leader,
village, where half a dozen handsome sheep are being fattened for the market.                                                                                      and the group of 30 smallholders which she chairs was immediately able to repay its loans in full
                                                                                                                                                                   – something several other groups failed to achieve. As a result, the microfinance institution has
                                                                                                                                                                   been happy to provide further loans. And no, in the sense that many other farmers have made a
                                                                                                                                                                   success of fattening their sheep and increasing their income. Over four out of five who received
Sheep fattening: simple, yet effective                                                                                                                             training shortened the fattening period to just three months.                                         a CGIAR
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Consortium
"With the profits I've made from my sheep, I've been able to buy a Boran heifer, which will yield                                                                                                                                                                        Research Center
                                                                                                                                                                   "With the profits I’ve made from the sheep, we've built an extension to our house and bought a
much more milk than our local breed of cow," says Misku, "and last year, when we didn’t get a                                                                                                                                                                            CGIAR is a global research
                                                                                                                                                                   high-yielding Boran cow," says Suchare Abamaliky, one of Misku's neighbours. Musa Kadir, who          partnership for a food
coffee harvest, we still made enough money from the sheep to pay all our household                                                                                 belongs to the same peasant association, has used the profits from his sheep to pay school fees       secure future. Its science
expenses." She’s particularly proud of the fact that her sheep-fattening business has paid                                                                         for his children. ”I'm now earning as much money in three months as I used to make in a year from     is carried out by the 15
for her eldest daughter, now 21 years old, to live and study in the nearby town of Agora.             I'm now earning                                              the sale of coffee beans," he says. He has ambitious plans to expand the number of sheep he           research centers of the
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         CGIAR Consortium in
                                                                                                      as much money                                                fattens, and he's also begun to raise avocado and mango seedlings, having observed the                collaboration with
"Misku’s forgotten to tell you about the chairs we're sitting on," says Abafaris Abamaliky, her                                                                    activities of one of his neighbours.
husband. "It was the money from the sheep that paid for the timber and the carpentry. And it          in three months                                                                                                                                                    hundreds of partner
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         organizations.
paid for the wooden box where I now keep my clothes and my private things." The pride he              as I used to make                                            This is the way new ideas are beginning to spread, across hedges and fields, from farmer to           www.cgiar.org
takes in his wife's achievement is plain to see.                                                                                                                   farmer.
                                                                                                      in a year...                                                                                                                                                       M A R C H 2012

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

Cattle breeds
Cattle breedsCattle breeds
Cattle breeds
windleh
 
Poultry housing system
Poultry housing systemPoultry housing system
Poultry housing system
Eddie Abug
 
Dairy Feeding Management
Dairy Feeding ManagementDairy Feeding Management
Dairy Feeding Management
Osama Zahid
 
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMINGORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
drsreenathds
 

Viewers also liked (19)

Calf Fattening
Calf FatteningCalf Fattening
Calf Fattening
 
An overview of sheep and goats
An overview of sheep and goatsAn overview of sheep and goats
An overview of sheep and goats
 
Cattle breeds
Cattle breedsCattle breeds
Cattle breeds
 
Small scale sheep & goat production
Small scale sheep & goat productionSmall scale sheep & goat production
Small scale sheep & goat production
 
Energy Efficient Dairy Production Technologies
Energy Efficient Dairy Production TechnologiesEnergy Efficient Dairy Production Technologies
Energy Efficient Dairy Production Technologies
 
dairy farming
dairy farmingdairy farming
dairy farming
 
Feeds & Feeding Management Of Goats1
Feeds & Feeding Management Of Goats1Feeds & Feeding Management Of Goats1
Feeds & Feeding Management Of Goats1
 
Exotic cattle breeding
Exotic cattle breedingExotic cattle breeding
Exotic cattle breeding
 
Goat feeding powerpoint pks
Goat feeding powerpoint pksGoat feeding powerpoint pks
Goat feeding powerpoint pks
 
Care and management of calving cow
Care and management of calving cowCare and management of calving cow
Care and management of calving cow
 
Poultry Farming
Poultry FarmingPoultry Farming
Poultry Farming
 
Poultry housing system
Poultry housing systemPoultry housing system
Poultry housing system
 
Dairy Feeding Management
Dairy Feeding ManagementDairy Feeding Management
Dairy Feeding Management
 
Feeds, Nutrients and Animal Requirements
Feeds, Nutrients and Animal RequirementsFeeds, Nutrients and Animal Requirements
Feeds, Nutrients and Animal Requirements
 
Dairy nutrition management
Dairy nutrition managementDairy nutrition management
Dairy nutrition management
 
FAO - agribusiness handbook: poultry meat & eggs
FAO - agribusiness handbook: poultry meat & eggsFAO - agribusiness handbook: poultry meat & eggs
FAO - agribusiness handbook: poultry meat & eggs
 
Basic sheep and goat husbandry
Basic sheep and goat husbandryBasic sheep and goat husbandry
Basic sheep and goat husbandry
 
Lecture 1: Cattle Management
Lecture 1: Cattle Management Lecture 1: Cattle Management
Lecture 1: Cattle Management
 
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMINGORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
ORGANIC POULTRY FARMING
 

More from CGIAR

More from CGIAR (20)

Gendered youth transitions to adulthood in the Drylands: Implications for tar...
Gendered youth transitions to adulthood in the Drylands: Implications for tar...Gendered youth transitions to adulthood in the Drylands: Implications for tar...
Gendered youth transitions to adulthood in the Drylands: Implications for tar...
 
Power through: A new concept in the empowerment discourse
Power through: A new concept in the empowerment discoursePower through: A new concept in the empowerment discourse
Power through: A new concept in the empowerment discourse
 
Friends, neighbours and village cereal stockists: hope for non-hybrid seed ac...
Friends, neighbours and village cereal stockists: hope for non-hybrid seed ac...Friends, neighbours and village cereal stockists: hope for non-hybrid seed ac...
Friends, neighbours and village cereal stockists: hope for non-hybrid seed ac...
 
Seed security and resilience: Gender perspectives
Seed security and resilience: Gender perspectivesSeed security and resilience: Gender perspectives
Seed security and resilience: Gender perspectives
 
Gender dynamics in formal seed systems in Sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide le...
Gender dynamics in formal seed systems in Sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide le...Gender dynamics in formal seed systems in Sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide le...
Gender dynamics in formal seed systems in Sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide le...
 
Reflections on gender transformative approaches in agriculture – The promise ...
Reflections on gender transformative approaches in agriculture – The promise ...Reflections on gender transformative approaches in agriculture – The promise ...
Reflections on gender transformative approaches in agriculture – The promise ...
 
Culture, choice and action in legume seeds systems in East and North Uganda
Culture, choice and action in legume seeds systems in East and North UgandaCulture, choice and action in legume seeds systems in East and North Uganda
Culture, choice and action in legume seeds systems in East and North Uganda
 
Gender differentiation of farmers' knowledge, trait preferences and its impac...
Gender differentiation of farmers' knowledge, trait preferences and its impac...Gender differentiation of farmers' knowledge, trait preferences and its impac...
Gender differentiation of farmers' knowledge, trait preferences and its impac...
 
Commodity corridor approach: Facilitating gender integration in development r...
Commodity corridor approach: Facilitating gender integration in development r...Commodity corridor approach: Facilitating gender integration in development r...
Commodity corridor approach: Facilitating gender integration in development r...
 
Gender and food systems research: Key lessons from the Canadian International...
Gender and food systems research: Key lessons from the Canadian International...Gender and food systems research: Key lessons from the Canadian International...
Gender and food systems research: Key lessons from the Canadian International...
 
Revisiting women's empowerment through a cultural lens
Revisiting women's empowerment through a cultural lensRevisiting women's empowerment through a cultural lens
Revisiting women's empowerment through a cultural lens
 
Integrating gender in aquaculture and small scale fisheries agri-food systems...
Integrating gender in aquaculture and small scale fisheries agri-food systems...Integrating gender in aquaculture and small scale fisheries agri-food systems...
Integrating gender in aquaculture and small scale fisheries agri-food systems...
 
Learning to work as a farming family team: Farmer responses to a gender-inclu...
Learning to work as a farming family team: Farmer responses to a gender-inclu...Learning to work as a farming family team: Farmer responses to a gender-inclu...
Learning to work as a farming family team: Farmer responses to a gender-inclu...
 
Building gender equity from the bottom up in agricultural communities
Building gender equity from the bottom up in agricultural communitiesBuilding gender equity from the bottom up in agricultural communities
Building gender equity from the bottom up in agricultural communities
 
The role of paid and unpaid labour on sorghum and finger millet production in...
The role of paid and unpaid labour on sorghum and finger millet production in...The role of paid and unpaid labour on sorghum and finger millet production in...
The role of paid and unpaid labour on sorghum and finger millet production in...
 
Scrutinizing the 'feminization of agriculture' hypothesis: trajectories of la...
Scrutinizing the 'feminization of agriculture' hypothesis: trajectories of la...Scrutinizing the 'feminization of agriculture' hypothesis: trajectories of la...
Scrutinizing the 'feminization of agriculture' hypothesis: trajectories of la...
 
Rural transformation, empowerment, and agricultural linkages in Nepal
Rural transformation, empowerment, and agricultural linkages in NepalRural transformation, empowerment, and agricultural linkages in Nepal
Rural transformation, empowerment, and agricultural linkages in Nepal
 
Intra-household decision-making processes: What the qualitative and quantitat...
Intra-household decision-making processes: What the qualitative and quantitat...Intra-household decision-making processes: What the qualitative and quantitat...
Intra-household decision-making processes: What the qualitative and quantitat...
 
Developing measures of freedom of movement for gender studies of agricultural...
Developing measures of freedom of movement for gender studies of agricultural...Developing measures of freedom of movement for gender studies of agricultural...
Developing measures of freedom of movement for gender studies of agricultural...
 
Building intellectual bridges and shared agendas / Strategy and example: gend...
Building intellectual bridges and shared agendas / Strategy and example: gend...Building intellectual bridges and shared agendas / Strategy and example: gend...
Building intellectual bridges and shared agendas / Strategy and example: gend...
 

Recently uploaded

What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
AnaBeatriz125525
 
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
srcw2322l101
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Potato Flakes Manufacturing Plant Project Report.pdf
Potato Flakes Manufacturing Plant Project Report.pdfPotato Flakes Manufacturing Plant Project Report.pdf
Potato Flakes Manufacturing Plant Project Report.pdf
 
Aspire Time & Life Leadership Workshop 2024
Aspire Time & Life Leadership Workshop 2024Aspire Time & Life Leadership Workshop 2024
Aspire Time & Life Leadership Workshop 2024
 
Blinkit: Revolutionizing the On-Demand Grocery Delivery Service.pptx
Blinkit: Revolutionizing the On-Demand Grocery Delivery Service.pptxBlinkit: Revolutionizing the On-Demand Grocery Delivery Service.pptx
Blinkit: Revolutionizing the On-Demand Grocery Delivery Service.pptx
 
Inside the Black Box of Venture Capital (VC)
Inside the Black Box of Venture Capital (VC)Inside the Black Box of Venture Capital (VC)
Inside the Black Box of Venture Capital (VC)
 
بروفايل شركة ميار الخليج للاستشارات الهندسية.pdf
بروفايل شركة ميار الخليج للاستشارات الهندسية.pdfبروفايل شركة ميار الخليج للاستشارات الهندسية.pdf
بروفايل شركة ميار الخليج للاستشارات الهندسية.pdf
 
What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
What is social media.pdf Social media refers to digital platforms and applica...
 
TriStar Gold Corporate Presentation May 2024
TriStar Gold Corporate Presentation May 2024TriStar Gold Corporate Presentation May 2024
TriStar Gold Corporate Presentation May 2024
 
Your Work Matters to God RestorationChurch.pptx
Your Work Matters to God RestorationChurch.pptxYour Work Matters to God RestorationChurch.pptx
Your Work Matters to God RestorationChurch.pptx
 
Falcon Invoice Discounting Setup for Small Businesses
Falcon Invoice Discounting Setup for Small BusinessesFalcon Invoice Discounting Setup for Small Businesses
Falcon Invoice Discounting Setup for Small Businesses
 
Innomantra Viewpoint - Building Moonshots : May-Jun 2024.pdf
Innomantra Viewpoint - Building Moonshots : May-Jun 2024.pdfInnomantra Viewpoint - Building Moonshots : May-Jun 2024.pdf
Innomantra Viewpoint - Building Moonshots : May-Jun 2024.pdf
 
Stages of Startup Funding - An Explainer
Stages of Startup Funding - An ExplainerStages of Startup Funding - An Explainer
Stages of Startup Funding - An Explainer
 
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdfMichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
 
Event Report - IBM Think 2024 - It is all about AI and hybrid
Event Report - IBM Think 2024 - It is all about AI and hybridEvent Report - IBM Think 2024 - It is all about AI and hybrid
Event Report - IBM Think 2024 - It is all about AI and hybrid
 
8 Questions B2B Commercial Teams Can Ask To Help Product Discovery
8 Questions B2B Commercial Teams Can Ask To Help Product Discovery8 Questions B2B Commercial Teams Can Ask To Help Product Discovery
8 Questions B2B Commercial Teams Can Ask To Help Product Discovery
 
HR and Employment law update: May 2024.
HR and Employment law update:  May 2024.HR and Employment law update:  May 2024.
HR and Employment law update: May 2024.
 
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
What is paper chromatography, principal, procedure,types, diagram, advantages...
 
The Truth About Dinesh Bafna's Situation.pdf
The Truth About Dinesh Bafna's Situation.pdfThe Truth About Dinesh Bafna's Situation.pdf
The Truth About Dinesh Bafna's Situation.pdf
 
Hyundai capital 2024 1q Earnings release
Hyundai capital 2024 1q Earnings releaseHyundai capital 2024 1q Earnings release
Hyundai capital 2024 1q Earnings release
 
Engagement Rings vs Promise Rings | Detailed Guide
Engagement Rings vs Promise Rings | Detailed GuideEngagement Rings vs Promise Rings | Detailed Guide
Engagement Rings vs Promise Rings | Detailed Guide
 
Series A Fundraising Guide (Investing Individuals Improving Our World) by Accion
Series A Fundraising Guide (Investing Individuals Improving Our World) by AccionSeries A Fundraising Guide (Investing Individuals Improving Our World) by Accion
Series A Fundraising Guide (Investing Individuals Improving Our World) by Accion
 

Ethiopia: Sheep-fattening transforms lives. ILRI

  • 1. Photo: C. Pye -Smith/ILRI STORIES OF CHANGE The power of knowledge and “value chains” Misku and her husband are among tens of thousands of farmers to benefit from a project which has helped them to improve the productivity of their livestock and crops and – crucially – market their produce more effectively. Funded by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and managed by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on behalf of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Improving Productivity and Market Success of Ethiopian Farmers (IPMS) project was launched in 2006. Goma, where Misku and her family live, is one of 10 districts where the project operates. The early stages involved the identification of crops and livestock which could benefit from activities to improve production and marketing. This followed lengthy consultations with farmers and local government staff. In Goma the focus has been on improving ‘value chains’ – linking production, Ethiopia: the supply of farm inputs and the markets – for coffee, poultry, honey, fruit and sheep. "Many farmers were keen to develop sheep fattening, but they didn't have the knowledge or skills to improve production,” explains Yisehak Baredo, the project’s Research and Development Officer in Sheep-fattening transforms lives Goma. “Their sheep were in poor health, and it took them up to a year to fatten them." Misku's experience was typical: she used to keep just one sheep, whose only food supplement was kitchen scraps, and she made hardly any money fattening its lambs. In 2008, the project provided training on sheep fattening for Misku and 119 other farmers. They learned, among other things, about the importance of providing their animals with protein-rich food supplements and how to keep them in good health. Such was the success of the first training program that the project repeated the exercise for 92 farmers a year later. When asked what life was like a decade ago, Misku Abafaris immediately says: "In those days I was never exposed to any new ideas, any new approaches." Then, after more Microfinancing: a critical part consideration, the 40-year old mother of six turns to practical matters. "I used to spend most of my time caring for my children and preparing food. And I’d look after our cow and help Science for a food secure future None of this would have been possible without access to credit, which was provided through a my husband when the crops needed weeding." local microfinance institution. Talk to any of the farmers who benefited and they’ll tell you in great detail precisely how they spent their first loans. Misku borrowed 1500 birr (US$115). With In short, her daily routine in Gudeta, a small village some 30 minutes’ walk from a tarmac this she bought five young sheep, a supply of cotton-seed meal, life insurance for herself and road, was little different from that of earlier generations of women in Ethiopia’s Oromiya insurance for her five sheep, and de-wormers and other veterinary medicines. Three months later, Region. There were good years, when the coffee harvest was plentiful, and bad years, she sold the fattened sheep and paid back the loan, leaving her a net profit of 1200 birr (US$90) – Story prepared by when the coffee failed or drought shrivelled their food crops. a considerable sum of money in one of the poorest countries in the world. Subsequent fattening cycles have provided her with similar profit margins. But new ideas and new approaches, so lacking in the past, have recently helped to transform their lives. Their most obvious differences can be seen in the fields below the So is her story unusual? Yes and no. Yes, in the sense that she is a strong and respected leader, village, where half a dozen handsome sheep are being fattened for the market. and the group of 30 smallholders which she chairs was immediately able to repay its loans in full – something several other groups failed to achieve. As a result, the microfinance institution has been happy to provide further loans. And no, in the sense that many other farmers have made a success of fattening their sheep and increasing their income. Over four out of five who received Sheep fattening: simple, yet effective training shortened the fattening period to just three months. a CGIAR Consortium "With the profits I've made from my sheep, I've been able to buy a Boran heifer, which will yield Research Center "With the profits I’ve made from the sheep, we've built an extension to our house and bought a much more milk than our local breed of cow," says Misku, "and last year, when we didn’t get a CGIAR is a global research high-yielding Boran cow," says Suchare Abamaliky, one of Misku's neighbours. Musa Kadir, who partnership for a food coffee harvest, we still made enough money from the sheep to pay all our household belongs to the same peasant association, has used the profits from his sheep to pay school fees secure future. Its science expenses." She’s particularly proud of the fact that her sheep-fattening business has paid for his children. ”I'm now earning as much money in three months as I used to make in a year from is carried out by the 15 for her eldest daughter, now 21 years old, to live and study in the nearby town of Agora. I'm now earning the sale of coffee beans," he says. He has ambitious plans to expand the number of sheep he research centers of the CGIAR Consortium in as much money fattens, and he's also begun to raise avocado and mango seedlings, having observed the collaboration with "Misku’s forgotten to tell you about the chairs we're sitting on," says Abafaris Abamaliky, her activities of one of his neighbours. husband. "It was the money from the sheep that paid for the timber and the carpentry. And it in three months hundreds of partner organizations. paid for the wooden box where I now keep my clothes and my private things." The pride he as I used to make This is the way new ideas are beginning to spread, across hedges and fields, from farmer to www.cgiar.org takes in his wife's achievement is plain to see. farmer. in a year... M A R C H 2012
  • 2. Photo: C. Pye -Smith/ILRI STORIES OF CHANGE The power of knowledge and “value chains” Misku and her husband are among tens of thousands of farmers to benefit from a project which has helped them to improve the productivity of their livestock and crops and – crucially – market their produce more effectively. Funded by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and managed by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on behalf of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Improving Productivity and Market Success of Ethiopian Farmers (IPMS) project was launched in 2006. Goma, where Misku and her family live, is one of 10 districts where the project operates. The early stages involved the identification of crops and livestock which could benefit from activities to improve production and marketing. This followed lengthy consultations with farmers and local government staff. In Goma the focus has been on improving ‘value chains’ – linking production, Ethiopia: the supply of farm inputs and the markets – for coffee, poultry, honey, fruit and sheep. "Many farmers were keen to develop sheep fattening, but they didn't have the knowledge or skills to improve production,” explains Yisehak Baredo, the project’s Research and Development Officer in Sheep-fattening transforms lives Goma. “Their sheep were in poor health, and it took them up to a year to fatten them." Misku's experience was typical: she used to keep just one sheep, whose only food supplement was kitchen scraps, and she made hardly any money fattening its lambs. In 2008, the project provided training on sheep fattening for Misku and 119 other farmers. They learned, among other things, about the importance of providing their animals with protein-rich food supplements and how to keep them in good health. Such was the success of the first training program that the project repeated the exercise for 92 farmers a year later. When asked what life was like a decade ago, Misku Abafaris immediately says: "In those days I was never exposed to any new ideas, any new approaches." Then, after more Microfinancing: a critical part consideration, the 40-year old mother of six turns to practical matters. "I used to spend most of my time caring for my children and preparing food. And I’d look after our cow and help Science for a food secure future None of this would have been possible without access to credit, which was provided through a my husband when the crops needed weeding." local microfinance institution. Talk to any of the farmers who benefited and they’ll tell you in great detail precisely how they spent their first loans. Misku borrowed 1500 birr (US$115). With In short, her daily routine in Gudeta, a small village some 30 minutes’ walk from a tarmac this she bought five young sheep, a supply of cotton-seed meal, life insurance for herself and road, was little different from that of earlier generations of women in Ethiopia’s Oromiya insurance for her five sheep, and de-wormers and other veterinary medicines. Three months later, Region. There were good years, when the coffee harvest was plentiful, and bad years, she sold the fattened sheep and paid back the loan, leaving her a net profit of 1200 birr (US$90) – Story prepared by when the coffee failed or drought shrivelled their food crops. a considerable sum of money in one of the poorest countries in the world. Subsequent fattening cycles have provided her with similar profit margins. But new ideas and new approaches, so lacking in the past, have recently helped to transform their lives. Their most obvious differences can be seen in the fields below the So is her story unusual? Yes and no. Yes, in the sense that she is a strong and respected leader, village, where half a dozen handsome sheep are being fattened for the market. and the group of 30 smallholders which she chairs was immediately able to repay its loans in full – something several other groups failed to achieve. As a result, the microfinance institution has been happy to provide further loans. And no, in the sense that many other farmers have made a success of fattening their sheep and increasing their income. Over four out of five who received Sheep fattening: simple, yet effective training shortened the fattening period to just three months. a CGIAR Consortium "With the profits I've made from my sheep, I've been able to buy a Boran heifer, which will yield Research Center "With the profits I’ve made from the sheep, we've built an extension to our house and bought a much more milk than our local breed of cow," says Misku, "and last year, when we didn’t get a CGIAR is a global research high-yielding Boran cow," says Suchare Abamaliky, one of Misku's neighbours. Musa Kadir, who partnership for a food coffee harvest, we still made enough money from the sheep to pay all our household belongs to the same peasant association, has used the profits from his sheep to pay school fees secure future. Its science expenses." She’s particularly proud of the fact that her sheep-fattening business has paid for his children. ”I'm now earning as much money in three months as I used to make in a year from is carried out by the 15 for her eldest daughter, now 21 years old, to live and study in the nearby town of Agora. I'm now earning the sale of coffee beans," he says. He has ambitious plans to expand the number of sheep he research centers of the CGIAR Consortium in as much money fattens, and he's also begun to raise avocado and mango seedlings, having observed the collaboration with "Misku’s forgotten to tell you about the chairs we're sitting on," says Abafaris Abamaliky, her activities of one of his neighbours. husband. "It was the money from the sheep that paid for the timber and the carpentry. And it in three months hundreds of partner organizations. paid for the wooden box where I now keep my clothes and my private things." The pride he as I used to make This is the way new ideas are beginning to spread, across hedges and fields, from farmer to www.cgiar.org takes in his wife's achievement is plain to see. farmer. in a year... M A R C H 2012