EU, FAO to provide €12 million to Cambodia for drought

31 08 2009

Written by DAP NEWS   –   Sunday, 30 August 2009 04:35

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (UN) said last week that the FAO will provide €12 million (over US$1,716 million) to a counterpart project in Cambodia to mitigate drought.

Cambodian project consultant of FAO Soeung Soy said that agreement will be cosigned by Cambodia and an FAO representative in Cambodia on September 2. “The budgets will support on the projects such as: Train to Cambodian Agricultural staff, seed producing, fertilization, and local vegetables.”

All the budgets was donated by the European Union (EU), he stressed.

“We worry about the dry disaster, during growing rice, especially on food security,” he added.

The Cambodian Government has made disaster prevention one of the cornerstones of its policy. Prime Minister Hun Sen previously said that “We must use pump water to help Cambodian poor farmers and improving seed production.”

Cambodia has 8 provinces facing water shortages for rice and vegetables production covering 40,000 ha





Cambodia receives US$11 million for fight against bird flu

9 05 2008

The Mekong Times

Friday, May 09, 2008

 

A group of international donors yesterday promised Cambodia US$11 million in aid to minimize threats from avian influenza and prepare the Kingdom’s health systems to deal with a possible outbreak, according to a statement from the World Bank (WB).

 

The WB’s International Development Association (IDA) donated US$6 million, the government of Japan US$ 3 million and the European Commission and eight other donors contributed $2 million, the statement added.

 

The grants will support the government’s Avian and Human Influenza Control and Preparedness Emergency Project (AHICPEP), a three-year project hoped to complement Cambodia’s Comprehensive Avian and Human Influenza National Plan.

 

AHICPEP aims to help the government contain the spread of the H5N1 virus; reduce losses among commercial and backyard poultry growers; limit damage to the poultry industry; diminish the viral load in the environment; and prevent or limit human illness as well as mortality, added the WB statement.

 

“The improvements that the Cambodian government will be able to make in its veterinary and public health services should serve to protect the population not only against avian influenza, but also against other potential health threats,” said Daniel Costa Llobet, first secretary of the delegation of the European Commission to Cambodia,

 

“The project will play an important role in minimizing the threat that H5N1 poses to human beings as well as the poultry sector in Cambodia,” said Japanese Ambassador Katsuhiro Shinohara.

 

Source: The Mekong Times