Goat-raising can help alleviate poverty in rural areas by
transforming this subsistence type of farm activity into a viable
small animal business enterprise.
Funded by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR), the proponents of this development project,
entitled "Rural enterprise development through innovative
goat production systems," hope that the project will contribute
to the bid to alleviate poverty.
Also dubbed as the RED project, the undertaking will be implemented
until the year 2007. Specifically, it aims to enhance production
performance of goats by about 50% and improve the profitability
of goat production in smallhold farms, enhance market access
of smallhold goat producers by improving the quality of their
products to match consumer preferences, determine the productive
and reproductive performance of improved goat genotypes raised
under smallhold farm conditions, encourage adoption of improved
goat production technologies by smallhold rural farmers through
action-learning strategies, develop a community-based selection
and breeding system that suits to rural farmers- resources and
capacities for the production of high-quality goats, and encourage
and initiate community-based goat genetic conservation activities.
Aside from enabling strategies, the RED project is into on-farm
and on-station research and development (R&D). On-farm R&D
will be conducted in farmers' fields where farmers themselves
play an active role in decision making and implementation of
project activities.
Packages of technology options such as sustainable parasite
control, feeds and feeding, housing and management, selection
and breeding systems, animal health program, record keeping
will be presented to the farmer partners for adoption following
a participatory approach.
On-station R&D, which will focus on genetic evaluation
and breed selection and improvement and feeding strategies,
will be implemented by researchers of the Small Ruminant Center-Central
Luzon State University. The outputs of the on-station R&D
will be made available to the project's farmer partners and
other goat raisers as inputs to their farming activities and
as aid in decision making.
The RED project is a collaborative undertaking of the International
Livestock Research Institute, Department of Agriculture, Bureau
of Agricultural Research, and Philippine Council for Agriculture,
Forestry and Natural Resources Research and Development (PCARRD).
PCARRD spearheads the working group that implements the project.
Other project partners are the local government units of the
Nueva Vizcaya (provincial veterinarian) and the Municipality
of Bambang (municipal agricultural officer, agricultural technologist
for livestock, and the barangay captain of Abian).
The direct beneficiaries of the project are the farmer partners
who were selected as participants to the project. However, the
community as a whole will also enjoy benefits derived from the
project.
Those who will be involved in activities (trading of inputs
and products) that would result from an enhanced goat enterprise
will also be considered beneficiaries of the project. Other
goat producers who will source improved stocks and packages
of technology and information will also benefit from the project-s
outputs. -- Elaine F. Lanting, S&T Media Service