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EU DG ECHO - DEVCO Addis Meeting Agriculture Sector Resilience 26 th June ‘14
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Ethiopia’s headlines Double digit growth rates through ADLI - slowing? Population - 90 million and growing (average age 17) UNDP- HDI ’13 - 173 of 182 Per capita income US$500, life expectancy 55 yrs, adult literacy 40% (<10% whh) and 45% child stunting (PSNP baseline - 50% and 12% wasting) HoA 3% population receiving 40% food aid. Malnutrition costs Ethiopia US$2.5 billion annually Ethiopian consume 19ltrs milk, Africa 40ltrs and Europe 200ltrs Recurrent shocks: drought, flood, conflict, volatile food prices, disease
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Drought hazard frequency (1974 – 2007)
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Agriculture sector 12 million farmer/ pastoral households - 95% produce and 85% employment 50 agro-ecological zones - adequate and inadequate moisture and pastoral 75% land area is dryland MoA’s development objective: produce and sell more, nurture the environment, eliminate hunger and protect vulnerable against shocks Agriculture 15% of budget. State Ministry flagships: AGP, SLMP, CPP and PSNP GoE - donor funding - 60-40% Limited integration, coordination and flexibility
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Smallholder farming 85% of holdings <2ha and 40% <05ha. Requirement 2.8ha 50% holdings use fertilizer and 23% improved seed Plots 1-4ha produce 70% cereals. Production doubled in last decade Improved market access - road network 87% smallholders keep livestock Soil erosion - 40 to 200 mt/ha on slopes Vulnerable - landless, women-headed, small plots, elderly and sick FEWSNET report 20% decline in belg in 30 years. This trend affects 1.5 million farmers Shocks - drought, food price, flood, pest/ disease
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Belg areas
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Pastoral areas 2 to 3 million pastoral households HoA livestock sales - US$ 1 billion Trends: livestock being concentrated rangelands: fragmentation, invasive spp, marginalised customary managers, inadequate tenure policy related challenges emergence of large, poor ex-pastoral community (livestock still important) acute malnutrition but onset of stunting
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Resilience-building Resilience - ability to bounce back after adversity or hard times, and be capable of building positively on adversity EHCT recognises the business as usual approach is failing poor Ethiopia DEVCO might: stress importance of livelihood-based vulnerabilities including trends, seasonality and shocks support holistic approaches linking livelihoods, basic services, DRM, social protection and capacity building adopt nutrition as a proxy drive learning to generate evidence that informs programmes and policy align with the PSNP - Ethiopia’s biggest resilience programme?
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Photo and graphic credits: Andy Catley, Kelly Lynch, Cathy Watson
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