Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
ProjectFarmers’ Market-Safe Horticultural Crop Production in Peri-Urban Areas and Marketing in Dhaka City to Mitigate the Impact of COVID-19 Crisis - TCP/BGD/3807 2024
Also available in:
No results found.In Bangladesh, the agriculture sector contributed in 2022 to around 11.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), with 60 percent of the workforce engaged directly or indirectly in agriculture 1. The Government of Bangladesh, in pursuit of its objectives outlined in the Seventh Five Year Plan (7YFP) 2016-2020, is dedicated to advancing the shift in agriculture from semi-subsistence farming to commercialization, focusing on enhancing productivity, expanding diversity, adding value, improving food safety and quality and streamlining processing methods. -
Book (stand-alone)On-farm practices for the safe use of wastewater in urban and peri-urban horticulture
A training handbook for Farmer Field Schools in Sub-Saharan Africa
2019Also available in:
No results found.The world’s population is growing rapidly and concentrating in urban centres. This trend is particularly intense in developing countries, where an additional 2.1 billion people are expected to be living in cities by 2030. However, sanitation coverage (collection and treatment) is not keeping pace with urban growth and as a result most wastewater enters water courses untreated. Many farmers in developing countries grow crops, especially vegetables, in urban and peri-urban environments using this wastewater, raw or diluted, to irrigate their crops. Such wastewater is often heavily contaminated with disease- causing organisms and chemical agents that can seriously harm the health of the farmers, the traders who handle crops and the people who consume them. It is therefore very important for urban and peri-urban vegetable farmers to be aware of the health-risks associated with using wastewater for their irrigating crops and to know how to use wastewater safely at farm level to reduce those health risks. Safe irrigation methods are essential when using wastewater for irrigation, but they need to be complemented with other practices from farm to fork to ensure the safety of others involved in the value chain. In 2006, the World Health Organization (WHO), together with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), adopted a multiple-barrier approach to reduce the health risks to farmers and consumers posed by using wastewater in agriculture. This approach opened the door to targeting a variety of entry points where health risks occur or can be mitigated before the food is consumed. This handbook focuses on low-cost and low-tech on-farm wastewater treatment and safe irrigation practices that farmers can adopt to grow safer products. When using the pronoun ‘you’, the handbook addresses extension officers, trainers of farmers, and farmers interested to apply and share new knowledge. -
DocumentEnsuring sustainable expansion of aquaculture in Bangladesh - TCP/BGD/3501 2017Aquaculture production (fish farming) in Bangladesh grew by nearly 200 percent between 2001 and 2015, to just over two million tonnes. The sustainability of further expansion will depend on ensuring high-quality seed and feed is produced, distributed and utilisedin an efficient, socially equitable, and environmentally appropriate manner. The project enabled seed quality to be enhanced by initiating a selective breeding programme to produce improved broodstock, and by developing better hatchery m anagement practice guidelines. Feed quality was enhanced by establishing monitoring systems to ensure farmers accessed high-quality, unadulterated feed.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
No results found.