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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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Capacity building
Conservation
Desertification
Development aid
Food Security
Forestry
Income generating
Initiative on Soaring Food Prices ISFP
Land degradation
Rural communities
Senegal
Special Programme for Food Security SPFS
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The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
The First Africa Drylands Week
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The First Africa Drylands Week
11 June 2011, Thikene Ndiaye - Participants of the Africa Drylands Week conference visiting the FAO Acacia Tree Project that has benefited the local Women's Committee. The project has benefited 150 women in the village. From 2004 to 2007, FAO, in partnership with the Senegalese Forestry Service, provided seeds and seedlings and taught the women in the village how to plant acacia trees as well as how to extract and market the gum they produce.
FAO Project: GTFS/RAF/387/ITA - Acacia Operation. Support to Food Security, Poverty Alleviation and Soil Degradation Control in the Gums and Resins Producer Countries (Burkina Faso, Chad, Kenya, Niger, Senegal, Sudan). Objectives : Gum arabic, myrrh and frankincense are abundant in the Sahel region of sub-Saharan Africa. These local resources present the way forward to sustainable management and development of the Sahel regions, which naturally have fewer options due to difficult environmental conditions. However, irregularity of supply accompanied by fluctuating prices and variable quality from some sources results in unfavourable long-term effects on the demand of these commodities. As a result, producing countries are experiencing problems in relation to commercialization and ensuring a value-added product in relation to international markets. A coordinated strategy among producer countries and partners is therefore needed to capitalize on the existing opportunities and address the constraints. In fact a coordinated strategy will enable producing countries to have better control of the international trade and share different experience in the area of production, processing, quality control and marketing. The project seeks to address these areas and prepare a 10-year plan for development of gum and resin production in the framework of the NGARA network.
06/11/2011
Credit
© FAO/Seyllou Diallo
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
1.06 MB
Unique ID
UF11OV1
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Photo-Library@fao.org