Dar es Salaam, 29 January
2015 -Targeted investments in Tanzanian agriculture contributed
to increasing yields for crops such as
paddy, maize, or tomatoin a range of 60
to 120 per cent in those areas where irrigation and extension activities were
carried out at a substantial level, a new country programme evaluation by the
Independent Office of Evaluation of the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD), presented today in Dar es Salaam, reveals.
Tanzania has the
second-largest IFAD portfolio (in terms of volume of lending) in the East and
Southern Africa region, after Ethiopia. Since the beginning of IFAD's
operations in the country in 1978, IFAD has financed 14loan-funded investment projects
of US$360 million, and has mobilized more than US$700 million in support to
agricultural development projects.
The government has provided cofinancing of US$72
million, or about 10 per cent of total portfolio costs. Additional
contributions were provided by other donors, notably the African Development
Bank, the World Bank and the governments of Belgium, Japan and Ireland.
The evaluation recommended
that IFAD support the next phase of the Agricultural Sector Development
Programme – a governmental programme that aims to improve farmers' access to
and use of agricultural knowledge, technologies,
marketing systems and infrastructure, in Mainland and Zanzibar.
“In Zanzibar and Pemba
alone, IFAD’s supportthrough the Agricultural Sector Development Programme has
assisted more than 35,000 farmers, 62 per cent of whom were women,” said Nadine
Gbossa, Head of the IFAD Regional Office in Nairobi.
“This programme has
concentrated on agricultural extension activities, adopting the innovative
Farmer Field Schools approach. The Government has adopted this approach as part
of its policies and strategies, and is now integrating it in its programmes.
This is a major achievement for IFAD as a partner.”
The evaluation report
highlighted how instrumental IFAD and other development partners were in
supporting Tanzania’s decentralization policy, which seeks to devolve
responsibility for designing and implementing projects to local government
authorities. The evaluation, however, found limited progress in supporting
agricultural marketing and value chain development.
The independent evaluation
report – the second of its kind in Tanzania – will inform IFAD’s next country
strategy in late 2015.
“The next IFAD country strategy is an opportunity to
build on the results of agriculture extension activities and focus on marketing and agricultural
value-chain development, as well as tostrengthen non-lending activities, including
knowledge management, policy dialogue and partnership-building,” said Oscar A.
Garcia, Director of the Independent Office of Evaluation. "Moreover, there
is room to broaden engagement with the private sector and explore more
coordinated support to value chains with other development partners in Tanzania,"
he added.
The full evaluation report is
expected to be released in April 2015.
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