2009-03-30

Development aid being phased out in Tajikistan

A successful Swedish seed project financed by Sida has been carried out in Central Asia since the year 2000. According to Rutger Persson, supporting Tajikistan in the development of its seed industry is a good form of aid in the fight to reduce poverty. Rutger Persson has worked with development aid in Africa for 20 years. He bought Svalöf Weibull’s Consultancy Department 3 years ago and now runs it as a private company.

During the Soviet era, countries like Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan were successful in plant breeding and seed production. The post-Soviet era has meant the halt of centralised supplies of material and technical resources from Moscow, the collapse of state plant breeding and the drastic decline in the quality of seed.

Sweden has a long tradition and knowledge of reforming a subsidized agriculture and seed industry to a commercialised seed industry and prosperous farming. Our goal is to ‘transfer’ the Swedish experience to Central Asia. Our concept is based on strengthening all the links in the seed industry.

In the year 2000, Svalöf (in consortium with NIRAS) was awarded a contract by the EU to develop the seed industry in Kyrgyzstan. The success achieved during the first three years encouraged Sida to take over the financial responsibility for this project when EU funding ended. A similar project was initiated in Tajikistan in 2004.The main objectives of the project are to build a commercial seed industry where profit is closely connected to sustainability. This includes strengthening institutional and regulatory structures to international standards; improving plant breeding, variety testing, seed processing and marketing services so as to create a competitive marketing, seed farms’ management practices and techniques in order to improve output and quality. However, it is a race against time as the Swedish Government has adopted a phase-out strategy for development cooperation with Central Asia, to take place during 2008–2010.

Read article here

2010-10-05

Phase I of PBSP 2010/2011

On 6th September the first phase of the training programme in “Plant Breeding and Seed Production” will start. The participants are 25 in number and all professionals from their respective countries’ seed sector. The represented countries are...

2010-08-23

A seminar on food security was held on the initiative of the Foreign Office at SLU in Alnarp Wednesday 18 August. On the following links are programs, participants, and materials from the seminar, including an article from the Swedish farm magazine ATL.

2010-05-05

Start of GRIP 2010

On the 3 of May, Phase I of the 2010 GRIP Training Programme started at Alnarp Sweden. 23 participants from 17 countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America are attending the programme...

2010-04-30

Phase II of PBSP 2010

The regional phase of the International Training Programme (ITP) in Plant Breeding and Seed production 2009/10 was held in Zambia from 15 to 26 of March, 2010. Resource persons were drawn both from..

2009-10-01

New Office Location

Svalöf Consulting has moved to a new office within the campus of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Alnarp.

2009-09-12

2nd World Seed Conference 2009

“Urgent government measures and increased public and private investment in the seed sector are required for the long term if agriculture is to meet the challenge of food security in the context of population growth and climate change.”