The European Union Delegation to Papua New Guinea paid a visit to EU-STREIT Programme's implementation sites in East Sepik and engaged directly with the farmers and beneficiaries.
Cheering the visit, the visibly contented villagers performed an inspiring welcome ceremony, enriched with their genuine cultural heritage.
Interacting with the farmers, the Delegation engaged with and was equally briefed by the community members and Programme staff on the steps taken to empower cocoa farmers through training and provision of inputs.
Travelling along Mighty Sepik River's tributaries, the mission also had the opportunity to witness how the hard-working Water Maintenance Groups (WMG), trained, equipped, and recruited by the Programme, helping river-bank communities to pass through debris-blocked waterways, to access markets, towns, and health posts.
Supporting farmers to forge ahead along the value chains is a major task envisaged by the Programme.
Training cocoa fermentary owners is crucial for building the capacity of the rural communities to carry out quality and quantity value chain activities, from production to marketing.
The team also addressed, interacted with, and received comments shared by the participants.
The EU-STREIT PNG Programme, being implemented as a UN Joint Programme (FAO as the leading agency, and ILO, ITU, UNCDF and UNDP as partners), is the largest grant-funded Programme of the European Union in the country and the Pacific region. The Programme aims to help improve the lives of the people from East Sepik and Sandaun provinces, by focusing on increasing sustainable and inclusive economic development of rural areas through improved economic returns and opportunities from cocoa, vanilla and fishery value chains while strengthening and improving the efficiency of value chain enablers, including the business environment, and supporting sustainable, climate-proof transport and energy infrastructure development.
For General Inquiries: PNG-EU-STREIT@fao.org | For Media Inquiries: Amir.Khaleghiyan@fao.org
Credits:
FAO, EU-STREIT Programme