Strengthening capacities in Cambodia to increase off-season vegetable production


The demand for vegetables in Cambodia is around 1.2 million tonnes per year, but current national output meets only about half of this, and the country has to import the difference from neighboring countries. In response, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries is working with WorldVeg and partners to increase the supply of vegetables year-round, focusing especially on off-season production when yields are generally low, but there is great potential for improvement.

Alongside the establishment of demonstration sites to train farmers on appropriate technologies, the Cambodian General Department of Agriculture in partnership with WorldVeg, ran a training course on 9-12 October 2023 for 30 participants on pest and disease management and good agricultural practices.

 

 

Srinivasan Ramasamy, WorldVeg program leader for safe and sustainable value chains at and who led Center’s group of specialist trainers, said that “We aim to empower farmers with the capacity to cultivate vegetables by introducing new farming technologies in specific regions, so it is essential that we first enhance the skills and knowledge of all the teachers present.” He also explained that farmers often over-use pesticides during vegetable cultivation, so the project raises awareness and advocates for the production of safe vegetables. Also, crop rotation is imperative to replenish soil fertility and ensure long-term sustainability for continued production.

At the training course, Mak Soeun, deputy head of the general department, identified climate change, crop pests and diseases, and concerns over product quality and safety, as the main factors that limit competitive exports. He also noted that “the training of quality trainers is crucial, as we require this knowledge to educate district and commune agriculture officials, and I extend gratitude to WorldVeg and our colleagues who have collaborated with our Plant Protection, Sanitary and Phytosanitary department.”

See also – GIZ-funded course supercharges veggie production | Phnom Penh Post

 

This is part of the ‘Grow against the flow’ project, funded by Germany’s international development agency GIZ. WorldVeg provide a package of safe, ready-to-scale technologies for off-season production of key vegetables in Cambodia and Lao PDR; East-West Seed-Knowledge Transfer (EWS-KT) lead activities to intensively train farmers in Cambodia and training of trainers in Lao PDR; iDE lead on communications to expand adoption of production technologies and promote vegetable consumption; and the Lao PDR Department of Agriculture’s Clean Agriculture Standards Center promote LaoGAP standards and monitor quality of vegetables produced in the off-season.

Return to FRESH!

WORLDVEG IN THE NEWS

[Video] Da Ai Journal: Doomsday Ark (English/Mandarin)
Da Ai Televetion|Taiwan, January 2024

[Video] OUR ISLAND: Seed exchange and conservation (English/Mandarin)
PTS, February 2023

[Video] Seed conservation and Breeding-2 (English/Mandarin)
Formosa TV, February 2023

[Video] Seed conservation and Breeding-1 (English/Mandarin)
Formosa TV, February 2023

New partnership agreement signed to improve global nutrition and food security ACIAR, February 2023

AFACI Newsletter Issue No. 22.
AFACI Newsletter, January – December 2022

[Video] PROJET NUTRIFOOD: Dr. Marco WOPEREIS visite le jardin scolaire de Goulo-Sodji à Zè (French)
AgricoTV, April 2022

Low-Cost Solar Dryers Yield Sustainable Incomes to Marginal Farmers of Koraput District in Odisha.
ICRISAT Happenings Newsletter, April 2022

Audience au Ministère de l’Agriculture, de l’Elevage et de la Pêche du Benin: World Vegetable Center porte le projet d’un symposium (French).
Benin ODD TV, April 2022

Team of scientists from Taiwan visits Nagaon
The Sentinel, April 2022

Interview with Edmond Totin, WorldVeg Project Manager for SAFEVEG on Climate Change in Africa (French)
UN News, April 2022

Why Seedbank Aren’t Just for Doomsday
BBC Future, April 2022

The scientists helping farmers kick the chemical habit
AFP, March 2022 – Published in France24, RFI, MSN, Global Times and others

Sharing Knowledge for Self-Sufficiency – International Aid in Fruit and Vegetable Production
Taiwan Panorama, February 2022

Pressing for policies that promote “forgotten foods”
Grow Further, 9 December 2021

Cherry tomatoes
KU Research Weekly, 2 December 2021

The fight of mushrooms in farmland. Biotechnology at the service of humanity
Spark Chronicles, 29 November 2021

Asia and Pacific Seed Association (APSA) recognizes 2021’s five ‘most influential’ seed scientists in Asia-Pacific
Seed Quest, 19 November 2021

Un plan mundial para conservar la diversidad de frutas y hortalizas
A en verde, 10 November 2021

European donor delegation discusses partnerships for greater impact delivery in Malian agriculture
ICRISAT Happenings, 15 October 2021