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FAO’s value chain support for Uganda

Moving from subsistance to sustainable agricultural livelihoods through technical capacity building and innovation









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    Brochure
    Building durable solutions for refugees and host communities through inclusive value chain development in Uganda
    A comprehensive agricultural livelihoods approach in Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement
    2023
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    Uganda hosts over 1.5 million refugees, primarily displaced due to violence and civil unrest in neighbouring South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Around 95 percent live in settlements across eleven refugee-hosting districts, with 80 percent living below the international poverty line, and 54 percent experiencing food insecurity. Despite Uganda's progressive refugee policy, refugees struggle to integrate into local economies and become self-reliant. The protracted displacement situation of most refugees and limited prospects of return to their countries of origin mean that local integration is the most realistic durable solution for refugees in Uganda. In Uganda, FAO conducted value chain and market systems analyses in order to develop the skills of 1 000 refugees and 1 365 members of Ugandan host communities in Kiryandongo Refugee Settlement to participate in productive agriculture. Using FAO’s Farmer Field School approach in partnership with a local Ugandan non-governmental organization, mixed groups of Ugandans and refugees learned how to grow passion fruit, a valuable cash crop, using locally adapted, climate-smart techniques. Participants were also trained to grow horticultural crops, including tomatoes and eggplants to improve household nutrition, and were encouraged to form Village Savings and Loan Associations and producer cooperatives to negotiate prices collectively on the market. This good practice provides an overview of a four-year inclusive value chain development project implemented by FAO from 2020 to 2024, with funds from the IKEA foundation, in refugee-hosting regions of Kenya and Uganda.
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    Corporate general interest
    How coffee value chains foster climate-resilient livelihoods
    The FAO-Slow Food Coffee Coalition experience
    2024
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    This document introduces how agroforestry coffee improves resilience and ensures livelihoods in the context of climate risk and access to markets. Our intention is to reflect on the benefits and constraints of agroforestry coffee production, good practices for facilitating a fair and sustainable value chain, and what is needed for promoting and maintaining the adoption of said practices. It presents activities performed in Malawi and Uganda by the Slow Food Coffee Coalition (SFCC), whose approach highlights the importance of engaging all actors from the coffee value chain to allow for the strengthened livelihoods of coffee growers. It also offers a curated list of materials and sources of information on the concepts introduced.
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    Factsheet
    Technical Support on Forest Management and Sustainable Charcoal Value Chain in Uganda - TCP/UGA/3805 2024
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    Access to clean energy is a major challenge in many African countries, where over 90 percent of the population depends on biomass as the primary source of energy. In Uganda, 88 percent of the energy supply comes from firewood, charcoal and crop residues. The lack of appropriate regulation and the fact that the governance framework is distributed into different ministries and agencies has created an overlap in responsibilities and has led to illegalities and irregularities within the charcoal production system. The charcoal value chain is of great importance to the country’s socio-economic development, however wood for charcoal production is often extracted from natural forests and under minimal supervision, and is therefore linked to negative social and environmental effects such as deforestation, forest degradation and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

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