In order to support the government’s efforts to recover from the devastating floods that struck Pakistan, and Balochistan in particular, in 2022, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Government of Pakistan today signed a funding agreement worth USD $5 million.
In its capacity as a recipient of funding from the Asian Development Bank, the partnership between FAO and the Balochistan Agriculture & Cooperatives Department (BACD) marks the first time that FAO has received money from and through a government (ADB). In fact, this project comes after ADB approved a USD 5 million grant to support the country’s food security, disaster and climate resilience, and provision of emergency flood assistance. The Japan Fund for Prosperous and Resilient Asia and the Pacific (JFPR) provided funding for the ADB Grant, which is a component of a larger USD 475 million Emergency Assistance Loan (EAL) and USD 3 million technical assistance grant that ADB approved in December 2022.
The assistance responds to the Government of Pakistan’s request to support its post-flood recovery and reconstruction efforts and is aimed at supporting the restoration of irrigation, drainage, flood risk management, on-farm water management, and transport infrastructure in the flood-affected provinces of Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Sindh.
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The additional financing of the JFPR Grant expands the scope of ADB’s post-flood rehabilitation efforts, particularly by supporting (i) urgent provision of climate-resilient seeds for staple crop cultivation and (ii) women-led livelihoods to meet basic household needs, incorporating measures to strengthen community resilience to disasters caused by natural hazards.
Through this project, FAO will ensure the provision of climate-adaptive rice seeds to 60000 farm households for the next Kharif sowing season in order to increase productivity in four Balochistan districts most affected by the 2022 floods; Nasirabad, Jaffarabad, Usta-Mohammad and Sohbatpur. The seeds will be sown over approximately 30 percent of the total rice cropping area of the target districts. FAO will also support women’s livelihoods in agriculture by providing them with durable farming toolkits to facilitate farming activities and with protective footwear for safer rice transplanting.
The project builds on FAO’s immediate response to the floods in Nasirabad division by supporting smallholder farmers in planting for the Rabi season. It also reinforces the FAO Director-General’s pledge at the International Conference on Climate Resilient Pakistan last January in Geneva, when he ensured that: “FAO will continue to play a leading role in transforming Pakistan’s agri-food systems to make them more efficient, inclusive, sustainable and resilient, a challenge that has gained in urgency following recent floods that have devastated the country’s agriculture sector.”
A grant signing ceremony was held at the Economic Affairs Division (EAD) between the Government of Pakistan and ADB. Also present were Kazim Niaz, Federal Secretary for Economic Affairs and Takahiro Yashi, the Executive Director of Japan to ADB, and a representative of the Japanese Embassy in Pakistan.
Story adapted from Relief Web