56 updates found
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Fish and vegetables farmed co-dependently in Malawi

Report
Islamic Relief

Islamic Relief has launched a co-dependent fish and vegetable farm project in Malawi.

Fishpond water is high in nutrients that plants need, and vegetable deposits and waste can be used to feed fish. Increasingly, farmers across the globe are creating co-dependent irrigation systems that allow both fish and plant to benefit from one another.

Islamic Relief is introducing this system to 500 farmers in Malawi, to enable them to expand their work and increase their yield and profit while reducing feeding and water costs and wastage.

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Improving the Seed Supply to Boost Nutrition and Incomes in Malawi

In Malawi, undernutrition is a serious problem and a major contributor to the country’s other poor health statistics, including rates of maternal mortality, infant mortality, and stunting and anemia in children.

One of the barriers to good nutrition starts before any crops can be grown or harvested.

High-quality seeds that farmers can use to grow enough healthy, nutritious crops are in short supply year after year, leaving farm associations, unions and extension agents without the inputs they need to help ensure a good harvest.

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Malawi’s Maize Shortage Hits Women

More than two million people are facing food shortages this year due to the prolonged dry spells and soaring food prices that have pushed consumer inflation to 36.6 percent as of March.

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Malawians rethink maize planting as climate dries

Report
AlertNet

Tue, 9 Apr 2013 09:44 GMT Source: alertnet // Karen Sanje

MZUZU, Malawi (AlertNet) - Less than three years after Ezelina Nyirongo reluctantly abandoned cultivation of her favourite local maize varieties, the 48-year-old from Rumphi in northern Malawi is thinking of going back to them.

Read the full report on AlertNet.

AlertNet:



For more humanitarian news and analysis, please visit www.trust.org/alertnet

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Looking beyond food distribution in Malawi’s disaster prone areas

Report
IFRC

By Horace Nyaka

It is a hot Friday afternoon in Nsanje, one of Malawi’s border districts in the southern region of the country. For Mervis Windson, the day’s heat is made more bearable with the news that she will receive food rations from the Malawi Red Cross Society.

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Malawi Crops and Children Reap Benefits of Legume Mixture

Report
Voice of America

by Kim Lewis

Scientists from Michigian State University (MSU), University of Malawi, as well as healthcare workers, and Malawi farmers have all teamed together to find a way of dramatically increasing crop yields in Malawi.

MSU said the research involved crop model simulations, long term field trials and on-farm experimentation using combinations of legumes, cereals and corn. The scientists said the experiment was a huge success, as crop yields increased with added nutrition, resulting in weight and height gains in children.

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Malawi + 1 other
Britain Supports School Meals In Areas Affected By Food Shortages In Malawi

LILONGWE – The UK Government, through UKaid, has contributed US$7.8 million (£5 million pounds sterling) to the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to help provide school meals to children in Malawi.

The contribution will benefit nearly 770,000 children in 683 primary schools in food-insecure districts of central and southern Malawi. It will also enable WFP to support more than 5,000 children in 35 Community-based Childcare Centres, and provide take-home rations for more than 24,000 girls and orphan boys in primary schools.

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Malawi + 2 others
World Bank Support for Boosting Food Production in Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia

Report
World Bank

WASHINGTON, March 14, 2013 – The World Bank Board of Executive Directors today approved an International Development Association (IDA) credit of US$ 89.4 million to support efforts of the Governments of Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia to boost food and farm productivity.

Agriculture is the largest sector in the economies of the three countries and a major source of livelihoods for an estimated 277 million people living across southern Africa. Raising agricultural productivity is critical for fighting poverty, achieving food security and protecting the environment.

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Malawi’s season of hunger bites

Report
IFRC

Unless there is sufficient intervention by the end of the lean months, more than 36,000 children are likely to have suffered severe acute malnutrition.

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Burkina Faso + 7 others
FESA Micro-Insurance to offer free drought insurance design

Report
EARS

Delft, March 2013

Aiming to serve all African farmers, FESA Micro-insurance is growing fast. But, large scale crop insurance puts special demands. Using automated insurance design and monitoring tools, EARS has developed a geo-information approach to crop insurance. Mapped insurance designs can be provided for the entire region, thus allowing for unrestricted sales. This enhanced capability is also reflected in the offer to develop proof-of-concept, free drought insurance design.

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World + 2 others
Drought response requires getting development right

Report
IRIN

By Jaspreet Kindra

GENEVA, 14 March 2013 (IRIN) - It takes more than weathermen and agriculture experts to design an effective drought response policy. Recognizing this, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) invited social scientists and economists to the 11-15 March High Level Meeting on National Drought Policy, at which ministers and other officials are expected to draw up a framework that countries can adapt and mould for their individual use.

IRIN:

A selection of IRIN reports are posted on ReliefWeb. Find more IRIN news and analysis at http://www.irinnews.org

Une sélection d'articles d'IRIN sont publiés sur ReliefWeb. Trouvez d'autres articles et analyses d'IRIN sur http://www.irinnews.org

This article does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. Refer to the IRIN copyright page for conditions of use.

Cet article ne reflète pas nécessairement les vues des Nations Unies. Voir IRIN droits d'auteur pour les conditions d'utilisation.

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World + 4 others
Nuevo sistema de medición del hambre y la inseguridad alimentaria

El proyecto de la FAO "Las voces de los hambrientos" se llevará a cabo en forma experimental en cuatro países

13 de marzo de 2013, Roma - Una forma nueva, más rápida y más precisa de medir el hambre y la inseguridad alimentaria en el mundo será pronto probada sobre el terreno por la FAO en varios países de forma experimental.

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World + 4 others
New metric to be launched on hunger and food insecurity

The new metric will be field-tested in four countries, and relies on gathering information on the extent and severity of hunger from food-insecure people, through a carefully-designed annual survey to be conducted in collaboration with polling specialists Gallup, Inc.

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World + 4 others
Une nouvelle méthode pour mesurer la faim et l’insécurité alimentaire

Une enquête annuelle pour mieux évaluer la faim dans le monde

13 mars 2013, Rome - Une nouvelle méthode, plus rapide et plus précise, pour mesurer la faim et l'insécurité alimentaire dans le monde va bientôt être testée sur le terrain par la FAO dans plusieurs pays pilotes.

Cette nouvelle approche consiste à recueillir des informations sur l'ampleur et la gravité de la faim ressentie par les personnes exposées à l'insécurité alimentaire au moyen d'une enquête annuelle élaborée avec soin, menée en collaboration avec l'institut de sondages Gallup.

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Recovery project boosts prospects of good harvest in Malawi

Report
DanChurchAid

Last year many farmers from Nsanje, Malawi, lost all of their crops due to floods and drought. Because of the scarcity of seeds, prices at the local markets reached an exorbitant level, which many people could not afford. In order to survive they had to eat wild fruits, vegetables and flowers.

Nsanje, located in the lower Shire basin in Malawi, is a drought prone area. With its characteristic hot temperatures and unpredictable weather patterns, the district has proved to be a perpetual disaster zone.

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Ending hunger and malnutrition in Malawi

FAO, EU and Government of Malawi discuss way forward

06 March 2013, Lilongwe – Crop diversification, increasing the productivity and production of farmers through small-scale irrigation projects, improving local market systems, and other actions being implemented by the government could give a strong push to the eradication of hunger and malnutrition in Malawi, Director-General José Graziano da Silva said today, following a high-level discussion with President Joyce Banda of Malawi and EU Development Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs.

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EU and FAO underline support for nutrition and food security in Malawi

EU Commissioner Piebalgs and FAO Director-General Graziano da Silva in high-level visit

5 March 2013, Brussels/Rome/Lilongwe - During a high level visit to Malawi, EU Development Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, and José Graziano da Silva, Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), will meet today with President Joyce Banda to discuss the country's challenges on nutrition and food security, and to underline ongoing EU and FAO support in this area.

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Maize smuggling trade creates hunger in Malawi

Report
IRIN

MZUZU, 1 March 2013 (IRIN) - Every morning, Bernadette Kilembe, from the northern Malawian town of Karonga, is confronted with two related problems: She has to keep her restaurant running, and she has to feed herself and her three children.

Exacerbating both of these problems is the cost of maize - Malawi's staple food - which has become unaffordable.

Between June and October 2012, a 20-litre bucket of maize cost her between 500 and 750 kwacha (about US$1.50 to $2). Now it costs 3,000 kwacha ($8) a bucket.

IRIN:

A selection of IRIN reports are posted on ReliefWeb. Find more IRIN news and analysis at http://www.irinnews.org

Une sélection d'articles d'IRIN sont publiés sur ReliefWeb. Trouvez d'autres articles et analyses d'IRIN sur http://www.irinnews.org

This article does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. Refer to the IRIN copyright page for conditions of use.

Cet article ne reflète pas nécessairement les vues des Nations Unies. Voir IRIN droits d'auteur pour les conditions d'utilisation.

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Mobile Technology Transforming Smallholder Farmers’ Access to Fertilizer

February 28, 2013
Feed the Future | From the Field

In Malawi, Feed the Future is working with the Ministry of Agriculture to improve efficiency and accountability in the fertilizer value chain through innovative new mobile technology that tracks data on deliveries, inventories and sales in real time.

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Kenya + 13 others
USAID FrontLines – January/February 2013

About FrontLines

Insights from Administrator Rajiv Shah

RISK & RECONCILIATION