Lemigo Hotel, Kigali, Rwanda
Tuesday, 13
October, 2015 marked the official launch of the collaborative 3-year Africa Great Lakes Coffee program. The program aims to
strengthen the productivity and quality of specialty coffee in the Africa
Great Lakes region through research and policy support.
The launch workshop was hosted by the Institute of Policy Analysis and Research (IPAR) and co-hosted by Global Knowledge Initiative (GKI) Michigan State University (MSU) and the University of Rwanda (UR). Amb. George Kayonga the CEO of the National Agricultural Export Development Board (NAEB) gave the welcome. His remarks set the vision for the impact that can be accomplished through the program implementation. Welcome remarks were also delivered by the Executive Director of IPAR, while the key address was from USAID-Rwanda.
The launch workshop was hosted by the Institute of Policy Analysis and Research (IPAR) and co-hosted by Global Knowledge Initiative (GKI) Michigan State University (MSU) and the University of Rwanda (UR). Amb. George Kayonga the CEO of the National Agricultural Export Development Board (NAEB) gave the welcome. His remarks set the vision for the impact that can be accomplished through the program implementation. Welcome remarks were also delivered by the Executive Director of IPAR, while the key address was from USAID-Rwanda.
Participants at the workshop were drawn from stakeholders in the coffee industry and they
included high-level Rwandan and US government officials, the stakeholders in
Rwanda’s coffee sector, a representative of USAID Burundi, and Drs. Bonaventure Minani and Gustav Nkurunziza
from Ngozi, and Gitega Universities (respectively) who are the implementing partners of the
project in
Speakers during
the opening ceremony thanked the different stakeholders for their role and
support in making the workshop a success. They underscored the timeliness of
this workshop and requested for maximum participation from everyone. They also
stressed the importance of building policies based on research and evidence.
The New Times, Rwanda's English language newspaper, published an article here: http://www.newtimes.co.rw/section/article/2015-10-14/193485/
A key activity during the day-long program involved all participants collaborating to clarify the research situation in which this project is about to launch. Participants first mapped challenges related to antestia/productivity and related to building an enabling environment to resolve these challenges. They took the top 18 challenges, and analyzed this - exploring what we know, what we don't know, and what we might be assuming about the challenges. Then, based on what they had learned, the group honed this list of 18 down to 11 "How Might We's" (HMW):
No. 1: HMW understand the most effective
pesticide
No. 1: HMW improve knowledge on how to
eliminate PTD
No. 1: HMW understand the necessary incentives
to decrease PTD?
No. 4: HMW make agronomic guidelines available
to farmers
No. 5: HMW improve market access for farmers
No. 5: HMW address risks associated with coffee
production
No. 7: HMW encourage full implementation of
IPM
No. 7: HMW make enough fertilizer available to
all farmers?
No. 9: HMW improve extension services to coffee
farmers?
No 10: HMW connect coffee quality to coffee
prices?
No. 11: HMW improve the information
dissemination system along the coffee value chain?
Post kick-off meetings followed the kick-off conference on the next day. These were productive, allowing the implementing partners the face-to-face time needed to design the next steps of the many components of this project:
Key components include:
- Field research with 64 demonstration plots in each country.
- Field research with a baseline, mid-term, and end-line survey of 1024 farmers in 4 districts in each country (the mid-term survey will be a sub-set).
- The two field research components will feed the capacity building (training) and policy development components.
No comments:
Post a Comment