Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
A technical cooperation
for small-scale farmings
in developing countries.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
2222 associative fundamentsassociative fundamentsassociative fundamentsassociative fundaments
1. Small-scale farmings are
important for society : social,
economical and
environmental performance
(if minimal conditions allow
their development).
2. Cooperation to strengthen
rural stakeholders and rural
organisations capacity.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation themes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skills
1. Sustainable management of natural
ressources and rural territories :
� Natural ressources availability (public goods).
� Adaptation of natural ressources and territories collective management(pastoralism, forest, water management) and their legal recognition.
� Sustainability of farming and livestockproduction system, ecologically intensive farming.
� Economically fair ressources promotion.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation themes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skills
2. Strengthening of producers organisations, of
local and international markets
Strengthen producers organisations in order they well
control transformation and commercialisation
� Secure and lucrative prices availability on local and
international markets (quality, certifications, …)
� Limited dependance risks to large-scale agribusiness
industry by a diversification of commercial strategies
� Limitated feeding risk by productions
diversification
� Farmers skills promotion and products quality
improvement
� Small-scale farming recognition by urban consumers
and local markets development that link them
directly.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation Cooperation themes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skillsthemes and skills
3. Livestock and animal health services
development
� Small-scale livestock profitability increase thanks
to zootechnical and animal health sustainable
services.
� A strengthened livestock keepers function for
the outbreaks watching, linked to private and
public vets.
4. Appraisal to build local systems improvingeeeepideeeemiological animal diseases watching and animal
products sanitary quality, safeguarding veterinary
public health.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
Our cooperation Our cooperation Our cooperation Our cooperation way of workingway of workingway of workingway of working
� Working in partnership with local
stakeholders: FO, NGO, town councils,
training centers and universities, public
institutions.
� Implementation of local projects with our
partners to promote a rural and sustanaible
small-scale farming, inserted in national
economies.
� Stakeholders training and strengthening
of their capacity to promote their point of
view in public policies.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
Advocacy in NorthAdvocacy in NorthAdvocacy in NorthAdvocacy in North
� Promotion of the duties and
roles of small-scale farmings.
� Protection of the food
security and the right to
feeding.
� Protection of the poors’ right
to access water and land.
� Promote fairtrade and demonstrate its impacts on the south
poor farmers and on economy.
� Promotion of policies supporting territories and moutain and
pastoralist people development.
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
4444 major cooperation areasmajor cooperation areasmajor cooperation areasmajor cooperation areas
South and Central America, CaraïbesWest Africa
Indien OcéanSouth-East Asia
Agronomes et Vétérinaires sans frontières 2009
AVSF in 2009 AVSF in 2009 AVSF in 2009 AVSF in 2009
in a few numbers …in a few numbers …in a few numbers …in a few numbers …
� 61 projects in 19 countries
� A 220 persons staff (27 in France, 40 expatriate workers, more than 150
national professionals)
� 2008 Budget : 9 millions d’€
� A network supported by 600 members et 9.000 contributors
� More than 80 partnerships in the coutries
� Technical partnerships in Europe (universities, research centers, local
authorities, agricultural organisations, French Agriculture Ministery, …)
� Confirmed financial partnership with European Commission, French
Agency for Development, local authorities, european enterprises and private
fondations.
FAO-SLPP
project activities
CAMBODIA, 2009
09-11/2008 Report of livestock activities (FAO/SLPP)
1. Chicken Production Strategy
2. Pig Production Strategy
3. Cattle Production Strategy
Project components
1. Chicken health improvement
� Provision of quarantine cage
� De-worming with tetramisole
� Vaccination again ND for two round and FP as practical training
� Provide medicine for the treatment of disease and contact one vet pharmacy for farmer group
� Encourage farmers to construct bio-security pen and normal pen
� Follow up and advise farmer for chicken health (treatment, vaccination….)
� Organize the collective vaccination campaign again ND
� Organization of selling of vet medicine at the village level
Chicken Production Strategy
� Train villagers on chicken raising (Feeding, breeding, taking care…)
�Distribute 50 hybrid cock to farmers with technique to separate the newly-born chick after hatching
�Organize the supply of corn bran
� Advise farmers on feeding innovation using locally availability feed resources
� Follow up and advise the farmers on separating newly –born chick from the hen and taking care
� Provide commercial feed for chicks, drinker and feed through for farmers who practice according to technical training
2. Improvement of chicken production
� Facilitate in creation of one chicken farmer group with 18 members and system of share
� Prepare regulation with marketing man in the group committees
� Provide materials for farmer groups (scale, office materials…)
� Install one marketing board
� Provide 4 transporting cages
� Contact middleman, restaurant in Kg. Speu and updating the price of chicken on weekly basis
� Marketing man was invited to participated in the training of marketing
� Facilitate in providing Input of FAO to group
3. Improvement of marketing
Pig Strategy
1. Improvement of pig health
• De-worm pigs around the villages
• Vaccinated against FMD and CSF
• Training on pig health (vaccination, de-worming treatment of diseases….).
• Treatment of piglets and sows and recommendation on the treatment fattening
• Provide regular follow up and advise
• Involvement of VAHWs
• Train villagers on pig raising (Feeding, breeding, taking care...)
• identify all the sows with identity card for implementation of piglet care program: preventive and curative treatment for piglets and sow, feeding , Primex using for sow…
• Improvement of system of pig fattening: Improve feeding, using basemix in the feed
• Provide 300USD in cash capital for member for credit to increase the production
2. Improvement of pig production
• Facilitate in creation of one pig farmer group with 18 members and system of share and marketing man in the group committees
• Provide materials for farmer groups (scale, office…) Install one marketing board
• Provide 1 catching cages to Contact middlemen and updating the price of pig on weekly basis
• Prepare and sign the Agreement withmiddleman
• Training marketing man on marketing
3. Improvement of pig marketing
Cattle Strategy
1. Improvement of cattle health
• Recommend villagers to use VAHWsservice
• De-worm cattle with albendazole
• Vaccinate against FMD for two rounds
• Involve VAHWs in the activities
• Follow up/advise VAHWs on disease treatment
• Provide diseases treatment of project cattle
• Inform the villager about the price of vaccines
• Advise VAHWs where to find the good medicine for the cattle disease treatment
• Advise and follow up the diseases treatment of VAHWs
• Train villagers on feeding of cattle
• Select 11 farmers for cattle fattening program:
2. Improvement of cattle production
Description of data recorded Figures
Number of cattle 28
Weight before fattening program
192.96 Kg
visual aspect before fattening
program
25 % Fat , 3.57 % Medium, 71.42 %
skinny
duration of fattening program 66 days
Weight after fattening program 205.18 Kg
visual aspect at after fattening 71.43 % Fat , 17.85 % Medium, 10.71% skinny
Average body weigh gain 12.21 Kg/head
quantity of STU distributed/day 4.5 Kg/Head
price at selling date 2,300,000 Riels
quantity of premix
distributed/day
Premix: 15 grams/head/day
DCP: 15 grams/head/day
• Facilitate in creation of one cattle farmer group with 11 members
• Prepare regulation with marketing man in the group committees
• Provide materials for farmer groups (scale, office materials…)
• Install one marketing board
• Contact middleman in Kg. Speu for selling the cattle and updating the price of cattle
• Training on marketing by SLPP marketing unit for marketing man of the groups
• Facilitate reproduce the UTRS for next fattening for cattle to be sold
3. Improvement of cattle marketing
Challenges encountered
During the project implementation, challenges encountered included:
• Many reported cases of chicken thefts in the village of Reung Peung
• Artificial insemination of many sows proved to be unsuccessful
• Semen is not available in the target district,
• price of live pig is not good at the moment
• Shortage of rice straws for some beneficiaries for urea-treated straw
• Shortage of good quality of vaccine and veterinary medicines with
appropriate price for chicken strategy lead to some outbreak of ND
• It seemed difficult to have good middlemen for the animal raiser groups
(especially for chicken group).
• It is hard to determine categories of pigs agreed upon between
middlemen and the pig raiser group.
• It is observed that the market price of live pig is not good at the
moment.
THANK
YOU!!