ECOWAS signs €1.3M sustainable farming deal 

The President of the Economic Community of West African States, Dr. Omar Touray, has signed grant agreements with 15 training centres to build capacity on agroecology in member states.

The total budget of the grant agreements funded by the European Union is €1,320,784.43 representing about €88,000 per centre and for an average duration of 18 months aimed at training 12,000 young persons in the region.  

This was contained in a statement made available by the Commission on Thursday.

According to the statement, the purpose of each grant is to establish the framework of collaboration between ECOWAS and the recipient centre for the implementation of the programme activities in West Africa with the general objective of building the human resource and environmentally friendly system that will sustain and increase agricultural productivity and create resilient rural society.

The total target of the programme is about 12000 young people including men and women trained by 2024 in agroecology in the region.

The statement read in part, “Selected following due consultation and assessment process, the 15 training centres represent one per member state.

“In supporting the centres through the agreements, ECOWAS seeks to improve the quality of training, and the development of the centres’ capacities on topical issues related to agroecology and to increase the annual number of people trained in agroecology.

“More specifically, the objective of the support is to contribute to strengthening the training capacities of the centres in the promotion of quality training systems integrating application of theoretical and practical lessons on agroecological techniques and good practices according to the environment, and increase in the number of young people trained, in particular, rural people.

“ECOWAS support to training centres falls within the objective of the programme to facilitate networking and dissemination of pilot experiences and promising approaches in agroecology (with the Songhai Centre in Benin and the CIDAP Centre in Togo as reference centres) in other countries of the sub-region, particularly in the Sahel.”

The ECOWAS Agroecology Programme aims to stimulate the development of innovative practices that optimise the mobilisation of ecological processes in the field of agro-sylvo-pastoral and fisheries production in the ECOWAS zone by supporting family farms towards an agroecological transition that enables them to reconcile economic performance, food security, environmental preservation, and the health of the population.

With a total budget of 16.2 million euros, it is composed of two projects, namely the Support Project for Agroecological Transition in West Africa, funded by the French Development Agency at 8 million euros and the Support Project for the Dissemination and Implementation of Good Practices for Sustainable Agricultural Intensification funded by the European Union at 8.2 million euros. It covers the 15 ECOWAS member states and is scheduled to end in 2024.

You may also like

Recent News

Physical Intelligence, a hot robotics startup, says its new robot brain can figure out tasks it was never taught

Physical Intelligence AI Model Shows Compositional Generalization in Robotics

Nigerian govt names 48 individuals, groups ‘linked’ to terrorism financing — Daily Nigerian

Jihadists Plan Abuja Airport and Prison Attacks in Nigeria, Says Customs Memo

GenCos dismiss claims Tinubu reduced power sector legacy debt to N2.8tn

Tinubu Dismisses ADC Convention as “Noise Making” and “Rascality”

War on Iran leaves $58 billion repair bill across region – report — RT Business News

Middle East War Damage Costs Could Reach $50 Billion for Oil and Gas Facilities, Rystad Energy Says

Scroll to Top