US$ 39.5 Million Loan to Support Small-Scale Family Agriculture in Brazil

Published: 11 September 2009 y., Friday

Ūkininkas renka kavos vaisius (Toraja, Indonezija)
The World Bank today approved a US$39.5 million loan for the Rio de Janeiro Sustainable Rural Development Project in southeastern Brazil. The project seeks to improve income and living conditions for an estimated 150,000 people (37,000 families or 30 percent of Rio de Janeiro’s rural population), improving access to basic socioeconomic infrastructure, increasing productivity and linking farmers to consumer markets.

“The Rio Rural Project is an innovative approach to small scale agricultural development.  It identifies and supports local production arrangements, self managed by the communities and integrates them with other public policies,” said Christino Áureo, Agriculture Secretary of Rio de Janeiro. “The participatory and territorial focus of the project make it possible to generate jobs and income in partnership with the private sector, while promoting environmental and social sustainability and strengthening the communities in their traditional activities. This will be a great step towards decreasing inequality and improving the quality of live in the interior of the State.”

Specifically, the Project will focus on enhancing the entrepreneurial capabilities and opportunities available to small farmers via participatory and decentralized actions, complementing and building on the results of the Rio Global Environment Fund Project (Rio de Janeiro Sustainable Integrated Ecosystem Management in Production Landscapes of the North and Northwest of the State).

“This project signals a new, full service, direction in rural development.  It will increase the communities’ productive capacity in a way that is socially, environmentally and economically sustainable. Socially, with community investments and integration to broader social policies; environmentally, with carefully developed territorial plans that integrate production, preservation and improved carbon balance through reduced greenhouse gases emissions and increased carbon sequestration; and economically, with the creation of linkages to stable consumer markets,” said Makhtar Diop, World Bank Director for Brazil.

The project will support:

  • Improve small farmer productivity through technical assistance, adaptation activities and financial incentives;
  • Enhance market linkages through investments in increasing the value added and inclusion in agricultural production chains, improved rural roads networks, and the coordination of public policies on territorial development;
  • Strengthen long-term impacts on larger scale sustained productivity, by productive and environmental planning and training, as well as investments in agro-ecological and natural resource management activities; and
  • Improve government support to the rural sector through support for institutional reforms, including more demand-driven and flexible arrangements, promoting a multi-sectoral vision, and broader participation of local actors in the design and implementation of rural development policies, as well as the creation of a long-term financing mechanism.

 

 

Šaltinis: www.worldbank.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Taxation: Removing cross-border tax obstacles for EU citizens

Today, the Commission published a Communication which outlines the most serious tax problems that EU citizens face in cross-border situations and announces plans for solutions. more »

State aid: Commission opens in-depth investigation into Hungarian support measures for national airline Malév

The European Commission has opened a formal investigation under EU state aid rules to examine a number of support measures, including several capital injections and shareholder loans, that the Hungarian authorities granted to Malév-Hungarian Airlines in the context of its privatisation and subsequent renationalisation. more »

Fake Chinese products spread

Internet and lax customs enforcement drive growth of 600 billion US dollar counterfeit goods industry. more »

Report: millions escape poverty

350 million people rose out of poverty in the past decade, but 1.4 billion are still extremely poor, says the latest report into rural poverty. more »

Getting more people into better jobs

New plan sets out action to reach 75% employment target for the EU by 2020. more »

Innovation Union: three new European research infrastructures on wind, solar and nuclear energy announced

Research Ministers of the EU Member States and Associated Countries, together with the European Commission, are announcing in Brussels today three new pan–European energy research infrastructures. more »

Commissioner Šemeta visits Moscow to strengthen EU-Russia customs cooperation

Algirdas Šemeta, Commissioner for Taxation, Customs, Audit and Anti-fraud, is visiting Moscow today to discuss ways in which customs cooperation between the EU and Russia can be reinforced. more »

ECB must go on participating actively in tackling the economic crisis

Following on from Monday's debate with ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet, MEPs on Tuesday adopted a resolution, by a show of hands, gauging the ECB's performance in 2009 and suggesting actions to be taken in view of the economic situation. more »

Parliament approves aid to unemployed people in the Netherlands

The European Parliament today approved €10.5 million in European Globalisation Adjustment Fund aid to over 3,000 people in the Netherlands who lost their printing and publishing sector jobs last year, due to the economic crisis. more »

France unveils Taj Mahal gold coin

A diamond-studded gold coin engraved with a picture of the Taj Mahal and worth 100,000 euros is unveiled at the Paris mint. more »