|
Helping to Reinvigorate Agriculture in Afghanistan
| “The maize brought by CIMMYT and implemented by
Kunduz Rehabilitation Agency is doing wonders.” |
-Ghulam m Aqtash, Executive Director, KRA |

An Afghan farmer selects a wheat variety
at a research station.
|
Years of war (1979-1989) and subsequent internal instability,
plus a prolonged drought and an earthquake, devastated Afghanistan’s
agricultural infrastructure, production capacity, and agricultural
research capabilities. As a result, agricultural production fell
to an estimated 45% of 1978 levels, with crop yields declining to
about 50% of pre-war levels.
Wheat is the number-one staple crop in Afghanistan,
and maize is the third. Together they occupy 80% of the area planted
to annual crops in the country. A central aim of CIMMYT in Afghanistan
is to make improved, high quality seed of both crops available to
farmers, along with appropriate crop management technologies. To
date CIMMYT has responded to Afghanistan’s most urgent needs
by:
- Distributing 300 tons of quality seed of the locally-adapted
wheat MH-97 to 9,000 farmers in four provinces of Afghanistan.
- Producing and delivering tons of breeder’s
and foundation maize seed.
- Planting 35 wheat variety trials at 6 sites and
24 maize trials at 8 sites to identify additional materials suited
to farmers’ needs.
- Training Afghan researchers through courses in-country
and at CIMMYT in Mexico.
CIMMYT has collaborated with Afghan researchers for
over three decades—even during the war. Thanks to the Swedish
Committee for Afghanistan and the FAO, Afghan researchers maintained
contact with the Turkey-CIMMYT-ICARDA International Winter Wheat
Improvement Program (IWWIP) and continued to select the best new
wheats from international nurseries. The new seed moved from farmer
to farmer; without it, people would have suffered even more hunger
and malnutrition than they did. All winter and facultative wheat
cultivars currently registered in Afghanistan are derived from those
nurseries. In total, several hundred CIMMYT wheat and maize nurseries
have been evaluated in Afghanistan over the past 30 years.

An Afghan farmer holds up an ear of maize, one of CIMMYT's
varieties "doing wonders" in Kunduz province. |
Recent Update from the Field
An important component of a current ACIAR-funded
project (“Wheat and Maize Productivity Improvement in Afghanistan”)
has included collaborative work with farmers and non-government
and international organizations to verify in farmers’ fields
the performance and acceptability of improved wheat and maize varieties.
For wheat, the project uses two approaches:
- A traditional approach where demonstrations are
planted in farmers’ fields and the farmer assessments are
recorded informally through topic focused interviews during field
days. The varieties included in these demonstrations are released
in the country and made available where security allows. Using
this approach in Parwan Province, farmers showed a keen interest
for the variety ‘Sohla,’ which yielded well and showed
superior resistance to diseases like rust. The project is helping
to ensure that demand for seed of the variety is met.
- A participatory technology development approach
implemented by the Aga Khan Foundation brings farmers to research
stations to observe yield trials of promising varieties. Farmers
identify preferred varieties with red tags; their assessments
determine the selection of wheat lines for advancement and subsequent
release.
For maize, the project provided non-government organizations
with seed of open-pollinated varieties that were distributed to
rural communities. Farmer testing and feedback resulted in the identification
of two promising varieties: Rampur 9433 and PozaRica 8731. Farmers
said the varieties performed well but did not mature quickly enough
to fit local cropping systems, so project participants are identifying
earlier-maturing varieties. To offer farmers sufficient seed, the
project is pursuing two approaches:
- A formal scheme whose main partners are the Agricultural
Research Institute of Afghanistan (ARIA) and the FAO, through
the Improved Seed Enterprise (ISE), and under which breeder’s
seed will be offered to recognized producers of certified seed.
- Informal farmer-to-farmer distribution systems,
which have resulted in up to a 10-fold increase in some areas
under improved varieties. For example, the Norwegian Project Office-Rural
Rehabilitation Association for Afghanistan (NPO-RRAA) reported
that farmers who had planted open-pollinated varieties from the
project in 2003 had bartered and sold more than two tons of seed
of the varieties in 2004.

Afghan farmers discuss the performance of the varieties over
a cup of tea.
|
The project has built human capacity through in-country,
technical workshops, five of which have been conducted since 2000
on topics including: agricultural development potential and constraints
in specific zones; yellow rust and field scoring for the disease;
research methodologies; variety evaluation; and several field days.
The workshops have drawn 70 participants, including farmers, workers
from non-government organizations, and officers from research stations.
CIMMYT partners in Afghanistan include:
- The Future Harvest Consortium to Rebuild
Agriculture in Afghanistan, funded by USAID and coordinated by
ICARDA.
- AusAID and the Australian Centre for International
Agricultural Research (ACIAR).
- The FAO.
- The International Fertilizer Development Center
(IFDC)-USAID.
- The French non-government organization, ACTED.
- The Aga Khan Development Network.
- Improved Seed Enterprise.
- The Afghan Ministry of Agriculture.
- ARIA.
For further information, contact Mahmood Osmanzai
(m.osmanzai@cgiar.org).
This write-up draws on contributions
from Alma McNab, former CIMMYT science writer and the CIMMYT team
in Afghanistan, including team leader Mahmood Osmanzai and former
CIMMYT maize agronomist Julien de Meyer. De Meyer manages the Effective
Development Group (EDG), a non-government organization based in
Australia and has been commissioned by ACIAR to assist the Afghanistan
project in data analysis, training, planning workshops, and reporting.
|
 |
|