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AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Harvesting wheat grown using certified wheat seeds
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Harvesting wheat grown using certified wheat seeds
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Harvesting wheat grown using certified wheat seeds
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
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AFGHANISTAN, 2025. Wheat Farmer in Kandahar Province
18 May 2025. Kandahar province, Afghanistan. The happy face of Noor Ahmad holding a bunch of harvested wheat in his hands.
05/18/2025
Country or Territory
Afghanistan
Credit
© FAO / Hashim Azizi
File size
28.21 MB
Unique ID
UF1A2NM
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
From fields to families.
Over the past four years, FAO has reached nearly 2.20 million Afghan smallholder households through its wheat cultivation programme, benefitting upwards of 15.4 million people across the country. This large-scale, timely support has played a critical role in improving the availability of staple foods and helping to reverse acute food insecurity.
This photo album follows that impact through the story of Noor Ahmed, a farmer in Kandahar. From planting the first seeds to harvesting golden fields and preparing fresh bread at home, Noor’s journey captures the wider transformation unfolding across Afghanistan.
To support farmers like Noor, each FAO cultivation package includes 50kg of certified wheat seed, 50kg of urea fertilizer and 50kg of Diammonium Phosphate fertilizer, as well as training in good agricultural practices. With this support, farmers increase yields by nearly one-third per jerib (0.2 hectares), gaining an average of 360kg more wheat. The benefits extend beyond the initial harvest as the high-quality seeds continue to boost yields for up to three years. Farmers also benefit from surplus straw, which can be sold for extra income or used as fodder for livestock.
Wheat is central to Afghan agriculture, covering most of the country’s farmland and providing over two-thirds of the daily caloric intake for the average family. FAO’s support has become a cornerstone in national food security efforts, enabling vulnerable farming households to improve their food production, consumption and incomes, while strengthening the national wheat supply.
As Afghanistan continues to confront overlapping climate and economic challenges, sustained investments in rural livelihoods and local food production remains vital to protect these gains and build a more resilient, food-secure future.