Posted on February, 21, 2024 at 09:28 am
A grassroots organization is spreading the word about climate-smart agriculture while tackling food insecurity and increasing climate resilience. And women's leadership is the key to it all.
The pan-African nonprofit Camfed trains young women to become agricultural guides who teach their communities about climate-smart agriculture techniques, which help farmers increase crop yields by adapting to the effects of climate change while reducing their environmental impact.
As farmers increase their yields and improve their quality of life, the ripple effects spread across the community, evident in metrics like higher attendance and fewer dropouts at local schools. “More children actually complete school," said Esnath Divasoni, a sustainable agriculture expert at Camfed in Zimbabwe.
The connection goes beyond academic performance. Giving families the tools to produce enough food helps them afford school fees and ensure children are getting the proper nutrition so they are not struggling to make what’s typically at least a five-kilometer walk to school, Divasoni said.
Camfed’s agricultural guides bridge a gap in services by working with smallholder farmers from marginalized communities who may otherwise be left behind. Extension workers from Zimbabwe's Ministry of Agriculture train farmers with larger plots, but Camfed’s guides reach those who are missed because of their age or the size of their land, which is often an acre or less, Divasoni said. The guides ensure that farmers have access to climate-smart agricultural techniques that enable them to grow enough food for their families and, potentially, extra food to sell.
“What we teach, or what we give to the community members, are techniques,” she said. “Basically, we are bringing the new and the old techniques together.” By creating a fusion of traditional and new practices, the guides help the farmers they work with produce at the same level, or higher, than those who are supported by extension workers.
Climate-smart agriculture techniques include digging planting basins to conserve water, using recycled plastic water bottles for drip irrigation, cooking on cleaner-burning stoves instead of open fires, saving local seeds for the next planting season, improving soil conditions, and growing trees for wood, nuts and fruits.
“Most of the farmers that we work with can't afford to go and buy fertilizers,” Divasoni said. “So, we are teaching them to make their own compost. We are teaching them to use the available resources. We are also looking at diversification of crops for better nutrition. We used to have farmers who just plant one crop, but they now understand the importance of diversifying. We are also looking at water harvesting through the construction of dams and ponds. We are also looking at the adoption of small livestock.”
Most farmers in the program were originally using one or two of the climate-smart techniques — now, many have added up to seven more, Divasoni said. That’s a huge uptick compared to the baseline, and it shows the value of Camfed’s work.
Giving women the opportunity to become agricultural guides also teaches them valuable techniques and leadership skills so they can further improve their communities, increase food security and improve environmental stewardship. That development helps support their education. In turn, more children — girls especially — can remain in school.
A variety of community improvements are made possible through the program’s knowledge sharing. “We have seen people who never used to plant trees. They are now taking the initiative to plant trees,” Divasoni said. “We have also introduced the use of clean cookstoves, which use less firewood and smaller firewood than an open fire. We've seen some communities coming in with the initiatives of actually advancing the technology.”
After the organization provided the tools and knowledge to build stoves that were fixed in place, some communities made moveable stoves with materials like metal so they could be used for more tasks, she said.
The guides operate under the same premise. Originally, 1,000 agricultural guides were trained on climate-smart techniques. Each of them has gone on to train at least 10 young women from their community who reach out to more community members and farmers. The program reached over 100,000 people by the end of 2022, according to Camfed.
Source: Triple Pundit