Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Experiences of VC Promotion in ULIPH Livelihoods Improvement Project for the Himalayas – Uttarakhand 11 Nov 2009 Enabling Mountain poor to access Market 1 Objective of Aajeevika To improve the livelihood of vulnerable groups in a sustainable manner through promotion of improved livelihood opportunities and strengthening of local institutions that relate to livelihood development. 2 Project Coverage 5 Districts, 17 Blocks Households 42,690 Community Orgs 4,000 Villages 959 Project Duration 8 years (2004-05 to 2012-13) District Blocks Selected Uttarkashi Naugaon, Mori, Dunda and Purola Tehri Devprayag, Jaunpur, Bhilagna and Pratapnagar Chamoli Ghat, Dewal, Dasholi and Narayan Bagar Almora Bhaisia Chhana, Lamgara and Dhauladevi Bageshwar Kapkot and Bageshwar 3 Livelihoods Enhancement & Development Value Chains evolved 1. Organic farming 2. Off season vegetable 3. Dairy 4. Poultry (Kuroiler) 5. Medicinal and Aromatic Plants 6. Eco-tourism 7. Off-farm activities Value Chain intervention 2008-09 Value Chains ORGANIC FARMING Interventions Seed & honey Production Seed; 37.5 T Honey; 0.18 T Fodder production, animal induction, ILDC, Milk & milk products Milk; 84000 Ltr Ghee; 1.23 T Kuroiler; eggs, meat Meat; 60 T Eggs; 12.5 lakh (Income Increase by Rs. 480/HH MICRO DAIRY (Income Increase by Rs. 9797/HH POULTRY (Income Increase by Rs. 2891/HH Business Vol. Value Chains Interventions O.S.V. High value vegetables (Income Increase by Rs. 2500/HH (Tomato, capsicum, F. bean, pea, potato) R.N.F.S. (Income Increase by Rs. 11168/HH M.A.P. C.B.R.E. & other non farm enterprises High value MAP products (saussoria costus, picorhiza, asparagus, Aloe vera) Business Vol. 560 Ton Rs. 22 lakh Nil TOUR ISM (Income Increase by Rs. 6818/HH Community Based Eco Tourism Rs. 1.5 lakh Progress of Value Chain wise IGA, ME and SMEs Upto 30 June 2009 Sn District IGA ME SME 1 Organic 5108 66 37 2 Off-season vegetables 4415 334 15 3 Dairy 0 150 8 4 Kuroiler 2193 2410 82 5 MAP 111 0 0 6 Eco-tourism and Rural Non-Farm Sector Total 41 46 6 11868 3006 148 Target 26,290 ME and 2448 SME by end of project IGA, ME & SME TARGETS VALUE CHAIN WISE BY 2012-13 (End of Project) Total Organic OSV Dairy Kuroiler MAP RNFS Tourism Others IGA 21737 21737 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ME 33435 0 9242 5579 11536 1324 2057 1062 2635 SME 2500 126 616 372 223 88 218 70.8 786 Value Chain map of Off season vegetable Dharamghar Cluster [Current] F U N C T I O N S O P E R A T O R S Input Harvesting and Post harvest Production seed FYM/ Fertilizer Insecticide/ Pesticide Equipments Traditional Practices Unorganized farming Poor Harvesting Improper Grading Trading Transport & trade Consumption At District level • Input provider Horticulture, Block and private shopkeepers Local Consumer Farmers N= 76 traders S U R T E R S Consumption Horticulture department KVK & UPASaC Aajeevika Cooperative & Haat Local Consumer Value Chain map of Off season vegetable [Vision 2012] F U N C T I O N S O P E R A T O R S S U P P O R T R S Input Production Improved seed FYM/ Fertilizer Insecticide/ Pesticide Equipments Improved Technology Input provider at cluster level Improved POP Organized farming Harvesting and Post harvest Trading Harvesting Grading Primary Value addition Assembly Marketing Grading Packaging Transportation Farmers N=5460 Cluster Level Federation Consumption Consumption At District and Mandi level Local Consumer KVK,HTM Cooperative & Haat Govt. Line Departments, Uni., KVK, TNGO LIPH [UPASaC & Aajeevika], FFIs, Private partners District Consumer Regional Consumer Favorable climate , High returns per unit area Marginal & small landholders suitable for introducing organized farming Availability of crop insurance There is 40% farmer engaged in vegetable Cultivation for their own consumption Awareness amongst farmers Trade formation Opportunity of harnessing better prices and employment generation through primary value addition and packaging Trans- Intuitionalised community in form of SHG. Opportunity for formation of federation and other institutions Non availability of fresh vegetables Production Big gap in demand & supply of vegetable Threat & weakness Specific inputs Strength & opportunity Consumption SWOT analysis of off season vegetable • lesser volume fetching less price, • Lack of assured market •Poor packaging and handling •Lack of assured transportation • Absence of knowledge of Post harvest technology Lack of knowledge of plant protection Measures and irrigation facility Initial Investment is comparatively high Lack of access to finance Perishable nature of the produce Lack of good quality seed, equipment and scientific knowledge among the Farmers. • Lack of market Information regarding price of the produce Vision 2012(Dharamghar cluster) Benefiting 5460 target house holds in 546 hectare land [averaging 5 nali per beneficiary] Establishment of one Cluster level federation ( input support, marketing support and information and benefits of collective vegetable farming) Establishment of 20 vegetable collection centers 2 in each cluster Establishment of Community resource person 4 per cluster providing technical know how, demand forecasting and market intelligence. Establishment of assured transportation system. Increasing per house hold income by Rs. 16500 per year [Rs. 3300/ Nali] KEY STRATEGIES OF IMPLIMENTATION: Establishments of cluster level OSV co-operative Establishment of 2 Input supply and collection Centre at each cluster Input supply through Co-operative/ Federations Institutional arrangement for sustainable technical services Provision of CRPs’ & their Capacity building Establishment of transport, trading and marketing channels Institutional arrangement for sustainable marketing system IDENTIFIED OFF-SEASON VEGETABLE VARIETIES FOR UPASAC AREA S. No. Name of proposed off-season vegetable Availability Season (High Price) Variety 1 Cauliflower May-July PSB 1, snow boll 2 Cabbage Jan-Feb, May- July Green challenger, Bajarang 3 Cucurbits Feb – May Crop specific variety 4 Radish June - August Doonagiri, Japani White 5 Tomato June- November Himsona, Naveen2000plus, NP-5005 6 Capsicum May – July California wonder, solan hybrid 1, Bharat 7 French bean June - Oct S-9, Pant Anupama 8 Pea May-Oct Azad pea-1 & 6, Arkel 9 Potato June- September Kufari giriraj, Kufari jyoti 10 Ginger July - September Asami, Himgiri ACTION PLAN • Selection of beneficiaries. SHG members Priority WBR between cat (I) to cat (III) Should have appropriate land Must have interest in vegetable farming Alternative person in home to look after nurseries. Also must have alternative source of income Ready to contribute Demo & Training charges. • Site Selection Near-by road Cluster with 200-300 HHs nearby villages. • Capacity building Identification of training / technical institutes. Course curriculum (Pictorial / practical / theoretical). Identification and selection of exposure sites. Capacity Building of CRP’s • Nursery Management Bed preparation Water Management Maintenance of temperature, air & moisture Pest control Regular monitoring Transplanting at right time Nursery crop cycle Selection of quality seed and varieties • Cultivation Management Site selection and land preparation Crop consolidation Crop rotation Integrated Pest Management Regular monitoring by Technical Resource Person/CRP Development of Activity Calendar (Package of practices) • Marketing Management Assesment of local consumption ( from local shops to access the future demand & supply) – (Survey to be designed) Identification of demand of nearby towns & Haldwani (Survey to be designed). Collection Centre Packing & Grading Storage facility. Value addition. ACTION PLAN Event Activities Roles & responsibility Time frame Awareness among community preparing for awareness of community etc AM DEP I Week of April Preparing communication materials. AM TSG Arranging meetings, CO and AM DEP/ TSG 45 days before the sowing [I week of May] Associating the subject matter specialist, where required AM TSG I Week Of April Preparing material for beneficiary, AM TSG 15-Apr Cost – benefits, deciding the size of demo AM TSG 15-Apr Orientation/ briefing beneficiary on implementation plan AM DEP [BC, BP, CRP and GP] I Week of May Visiting the site for assessment of suitability AM DEP [BC, BP, CRP and GP] I Week of May Deciding the MOU format and signing AM DEP [BC, BP, CRP and GP] I Week of May Deciding purchasing method [Purchase committee at BO] AM TSG and FM II week of May Purchase of External Inputs AM TSG and FM III Week Of May Orientation of beneficiary & site selection Preparatory activity, procuremen t, signing of MOU 15-Apr Initiations of demo grounding activities Periodical visits/ monitoring Reporting Documentation (reason of failure, success, problems and learning’s) Land preparation AM DEP [BP, CRP and GP] I week Of June Sowing AM DEP/TSG [BP, CRP and GP] III week of June Intercultural Operations and irrigation as per the POP AM DEP [BP, CRP and GP] July and August as and when required Harvesting and storage AM DEP [BP, CRP and GP] II Week of August on ward Grading, packaging, transportation and marketing AM BDS [BP] II Week of August on ward Fortnightly visits to obtain feed back and identifying problems AM TSG/ DEP [CRP, BP] II week June Onward Inviting 15 to 20 farmers for sharing the results and learning’s during the visits. AM TSG/ DEP [CRP, BP] During the periodical visits Trouble shooting AM TSG/ DEP and Resource person As and when required Visit/ observation Reports AM TSG/ DEP [CRP, BP] Within two days of Visit AM TSG/ DEP [CRP, BP] Within Fifteen days of the completion of the Demo Crop-wise per Nali Economics S.N. Crop Cost of Cultivation Production (Qtl) Unit sale price (Rs.) Total Revenue (Rs.) 1. Tomato 950 7.0 8.00 5600.00 2. Cabbage 850 5.5 6.00 3300.00 3. Cauliflower 850 5.0 6.00 3000.00 4. Radish 250 3.0 5.00 1500.00 5. Capsicum 825 2.5 15.00 3750.00 6. Pea 300 1.5 12.00 1800.00 7. Cucurbits 500 3.0 10.00 3000.00 8. Potato 600 3.5 8.00 2800.00 9. Coriander 150 1.0 25.00 2500.00 10. French bean 250 2.00 10.00 2000.00 Crop Rotation Rainfed (70-80% of total area) June-July to Sep-Oct Oct-Nov to Jan-Feb Feb-Mar to Revenue from May-Jun rotation 1. F.Bean Cabbage Tomato 10900.00 2. Cabbage Coriender Capsicum 9550.00 3. C.Flower Pea Potato 7600.00 Irrigated (20-30% of total area) 10-15% higher production over un-irrigated 1. Tomato C.flower Cucurbits 12460.00 2. C.flower Cabbage Cucurbits 10200.00 3. Pea+ Coriender Cabbage Cucurbits 11100.00 Lessons learnt in VC development in mountain areas • Individual approach of production , collection marketing • Lack of input services and BDS services • Poor knowledge of value addition at farm level • Poor knowledge of market trend and consumer behaviour • Lack of business approach of the hill people Continued….. Key interventions made to get success • Orientation of project staff for VC promotion through Gtz/ ICIMOD • Vision building of community at cluster level • Interactions among community, project staff,Gtz ( RED)staff,govt line department staff and other operators(middle man,transporter,adhati) • Formation of product specific activity group of farmers Continued….. • Exposure of activity group members to different mandis and interaction with the adhatis ,knowing seasonality,pricing,quality parameter,logistics etc • Micro planning at farm/cluster level and its implimentation • Regular technical support and other BDS services through project and other resource agencies Continued….. • Buyer seller meet at cluster level inviting different buyers and their interaction with the community • Consolidation of volume /produce at village/ cluster level • Collective marketing of produce