Upload
heaton
View
41
Download
4
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Introduction to Livestock and Irrigation Value chains for Ethiopian Smallholders (LIVES) Project. Azage Tegegne LIVES Research Planning Workshop March 26-28 , 2013. LIVES Project. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Citation preview
Introduction to Livestock and Irrigation Value chains for Ethiopian Smallholders (LIVES) Project
Azage TegegneLIVES Research Planning Workshop
March 26-28, 2013
LIVES Project
• An ILRI research for development project implemented with IWMI, MoA and EIAR in partnership with Amhara, Tigray, Oromia and SNNP Regional States
• Supported for 6 years by a our development partner – Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
• Focuses on challenging high value, market-oriented livestock and irrigated crop Commodities
WHY LIVES?
• In line with GoE – GTP aim of transforming subsistence to more market oriented small holder agriculture.
• Potential for scaling out of piloted innovative approaches
and interventions in large scale development project (HABP, AGP, LMDP, SLM)
• As seen in GTP and from the lesson learned by ILRI/IPMS and IWMI, livestock and irrigated agriculture are high value commodities with huge potential and promise to transform smallholders from subsistence to market-orientation
Goal and Ultimate outcome
Goal• To contribute to environmentally sustainable, enhanced income
and gender equitable wealth creation for smallholders and other value chains actors through increased and sustained market-off-take of high value livestock and irrigated crop commodities.
Ultimate Outcome • Increased economic well-being for male and female smallholder
producers in 30 districts in 10 target Zones in Amhara, Oromia, Tigray, and SNNPR through the development of livestock and irrigated value chains
LIVES Project Zones
Intermediate Outcomes• Increased use of improved knowledge and capacity by
male and female livestock and irrigated agriculture value chain actors and service providers to develop gender sensitive and environmentally friendly sustainable market-oriented livestock and irrigated value chains.
• Increased adoption of gender sensitive and environmentally sustainable market-oriented value chain interventions by male and female livestock and irrigated agriculture value chain actors and service providers.
LIVES Objectives• Introduction/adaptation of tested and new value chain interventions for
targeted value chains/areas (value chain development)
• Capacity development of value chain actors, service providers and educational institutions (capacity development)
• Introduction/adaptation of tested and new knowledge management interventions in support of value chain development (knowledge management)
• Generation and documentation of new knowledge on value chain interventions through diagnosis, action and impact research studies (action research)
• Promotion of knowledge generated for scaling out beyond the project areas (promotion for scaling out)
Project FocusCommodities:
• Livestock (dairy, beef, sheep and goats, poultry, apiculture) and high value irrigated crops (vegetables, fruits, fodder)
Geographical:
• Ten (10) zones with clusters of Districts producing selected commodities
Commodities by ZoneZone Dairy (8) Beef (4)
Small ruminant
(6)Poultry (7) Apiculture
(5)
Irrigated agriculture
(10)
Eastern Tigray x x x x
Central Tigray x x x x
West Gojam x x x x
North Gondar x x x x
South Wello x x x x
East Shoa x x x x
West Shoa x x x x
Jimma x x x x
Gamo Gofa x x x x
Sidama x x x x
Value Chain Development Di
stric
t
AG
F
AG
AG
Fed/
Reg
AG
F
AG
F
AG
F
D1 D1 D2 D3
AG - Agribusiness
F - Farmer
Short VC
Long VC
IPMS LIVES
What are the possible interventions?
• Technological: eg. seeds, animal genetics, drugs, fertilizers, pumps, e-readers, computers
• Organizational: eg. organizational forms (public, private, individual, cooperative, government, PLCs)
• Institutional: eg. rules & regulations, behavior, linkages
Capacity DevelopmentStrengthening capacity public sector staff through MSc/BSc education
In service training based on TOT/BDS approach: regional – zone/district (eg)
Rapid value chain assessment to identify potential interventions -teams
Participatory market oriented extension – extension staff Gender mainstreaming – extension staff Knowledge management – extension staff Results based monitoring – specialist staff Irrigation technologies – specialist staff Irrigated crop value chain development – specialist staff Livestock value chain development – specialist staff
Knowledge Management Federal level
– Strengthening EAP– National learning events/conferences– Video production– e-extension
Regional/zonal/District level
– Knowledge center development– Learning events/conferences/workshops – Study tours– Exhibitions– Field days– New IT technologies
Research LIVESRapid assessment of value chains and
public support services
Value chain interventions on supply/production of inputs, production/processing/marketing of outputs
Knowledge Mngt and capacity development interventions
Diagnosis Action Impact
RESEARCH/STUDIES
Learning Learning
Promotion for scaling up• Facilitate project visits by key policy makers and donors
• Participation in government/non- government national, regional learning platforms, conferences and workshops
• Use of mass media
• Publications
• Newsletters
• Promotional materials
• Leveraging new investment into value chain development.
Direct value chain beneficiaries -LIVES
Research Education
Public Support Services
POLICY
Input Producer/ Supplier
Output Producer
Trader/ Processor
Indirect beneficiaries
• Producers and service providers in AGP, HABP, PSNP programs through (joint) capacity development, field visits, learning events.
• Producers and service providers in adjoining districts which form part of natural clusters – milk shed, irrigation schemes and watersheds through learning events, capacity development and field visits.
Gender in VC development
• Greater involvement of women (female headed HH, married women) in value chain development– Involvement in capacity development and knowledge
management activities– Targeting women for commodities and specific vc
interventions– Use of women friendly technologies (modern hives,
mechanized/conservation tillage)– Women involvement in cooperative structure and
water user groups
Environment in VC development
• Integrated in knowledge capacity development and knowledge management interventions
• Assessment of environmental impact and mitigating measures and synergies – highlighted in livestock and crop value chain interventions
Project Management • Coordinating Team – (MoA, EIAR, LIVES, IWMI)
• Steering Committee – (MoA, MoWE, EIAR, BoA, BoWE, LA, LIVES, IWMI, CIDA)
• Regional Project Implementation Committee (RPIC)
• Project staffing – HQ, Regional, Zonal
• Counterpart staff at Federal, Regional and Zonal
Partnerships
LIVES
MoAEIAR
RARIs
Univ
CGIAR
CIDAPrivate Sector
Dev’t Projects
BoWE
Livestock Agencies
MoWE
Farmers, Coops, CBOs
www.lives-ethiopia.org