In an effort to build a long-term source of food supplies in developing countries while boosting small-scale agriculture, the World Food Programme (WFP) will soon begin buying food from local farmers in
The agency is set on making a pilot purchase of 250 metric tonnes (mt) of cowpeas in
The P4P includes a basket of measures, such as an advance contract to purchase food directly from small-scale farmers, thereby ensuring that they have access to funds to reinvest in agriculture; modifying the tender procedure to help small traders compete; and providing technical assistance to mill grain and fortify flour. The program will be active in five Mozambican provinces - Manica, Sofala, Zambezia, Nampula and Tete - and will buy cereals and pulses from smallholder farmers' organisations as well as small/medium traders.
Andrea Alfieri, WFP's Mozambique Country Office P4P Focal Point, said the program, called Building Commodity Value Chains and Market Linkages for Farmers' Associations, would be part of a joint program with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). "On one side, WFP will re-adapt its procurement procedures to widen its supplier basis, offering them [suppliers] an additional market opportunity; on the other side, the three agencies [WFP, FAO, IFAD] will match this opportunity with the delivery of an assistance package, including training, equipment and credit, to tackle issues such as low productivity, storage, post-harvest handling, quality and marketing strategy," Alfieri said.
The program hopes to improve the ability of small-scale farmers to access agricultural markets by contracting food purchases from them, and also to help small and medium traders.
Marc Cohen, research fellow at the US-based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), said the scale of food purchases under this programme could be handy in an emergency or school-feeding initiative, besides boosting small-farm agriculture. "But there is a potential risk," he cautioned. "Depending on the harvest in a given year and the commission, the programme could risk contributing to inflation, but in an average year it could be beneficial to farmers."
The agency's attempts to purchase supplies in developing countries has been influenced by many of its donors – mostly members of the European Union - who have been keen to break the link between supporting their farmers and overseas food aid. Most donors now provide WFP with cash and encourage the agency to procure food in beneficiary countries.
In 2007, WFP bought 46,000mt of food commodities in
This story, entitled “MOZAMBIQUE: Boost for the small farmer” and datelined
The U.N. World Food Programme, backed by philanthropists Bill Gates and Howard Buffett, said on Wednesday it will buy surplus crops directly from poor farmers in Africa and
WFP executive director Josette Sheeran said the project will initially be tested in 21 countries including
For the full story, see Gates, Buffett back WFP plan to help poor farmers, by Lesley Wroughton, Reuters, datedlined the United Nations 24 September 2008.
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