:

+260 977 886 876

24/7 Mon-Fri

Top Stories

MECHANIZATION 360 EXCITES KALABO FARMERS AFTER A TRIPLE YIELD

US$40.8M BREFOLES PROJECT TO PROMOTE CLIMATE RESILIENCE

HARNESSING UNDERUTILISED CROPS TO STRENGTHEN FOOD SECURITY

FRA PURCHASES OVER 49,900

Agriculture Marketing

Preventing Egg-Eating Egg-Grading in Layer Chickens

Tractor Ballasting: Why It Matters and How to Do It Right

Different Approaches to Food and Farming

Feeding Ruminants for Optimal Health and Productivity

From Hoof to Ham: The Essential Steps of Meat Processing

Poultry Diseases and Prevention Strategies

Livestock Autopsy

DAIRY CATTLE BREEEDS

Preserving Crop Quality: A Guide to Post-Harvest Management and Storage

Beetroot Cultivation

GOVT LAUNCH FOOD BALANCE SHEETS REPORT

GOVT ROLLS OUT SMALL-SCALE, SOLAR-POWERED IRRIGATION

AGRIC STAFF URGED TO BE FRONTLINE DEFENDERS OF FOOD SECURITY

GOVERNMENT TO BUY OVER 100,000 METRIC TONNES OF MAIZE IN EASTERN PROVINCE

IRRIGATION SCHEMES

JAPAN EXTENDS RICE DEVELOPMENT PROJECT BY THREE YEARS

ZARI LAUNCHES SOUTHERN AFRICA'S AGROECOLOGY RESEARCH NETWORK (RAENS) PROJECT

ZAMBIA COMMITS TO BOOSTING CROP DIVERSITY THROUGH GLOBAL INITIATIVE

GIZ EMPOWERS FIELD STAFF WITH TABLETS

CEEC FUNDS K8.4MILLION AQUA FISH MARKETING COOPERATIVE

POULTRY VACCINE MIXING

EFFECTIVE GOAT PRODUCTION

DAIRY CATTLE BREEEDS

Understanding Farm Size: Hectares vs. Acres and the Key to Profitability

Beetroot Cultivation

Lighting The Way To Optimal Egg Production In layer chickens

Growing Crunchy Carrots: Tips and Technique For A Successful Harvest

Cultivating Cabbage: A Beginners Guide to Success

Dairy Cow Management During the Dry Season: Strategies for Increased Milk Production

A Guide To Effective Farm Pest Management

Growing Carrots: A Comprehensive Guide

CHIFUNABULI RECORDS RISE IN RICE FARMING THANKS TO MOREDEP

DEVELOPMENT OF A LOCUST OUTBREAK RESPONSE PLAN IN WESTERN PROVINCE

27,900 FARMERS TO BE TRAINED IN CSA IN MUCHINGA PROVINCE BY DECEMBER

GOVT COMMISSIONS NAKONDE PLANT HEALTH LABORATORY

GOVT CONDUCTS CLIMATE-SMART AGRICULTURE TRAINING IN SAMFYA

EFFICIENT USE OF LABOUR AND INPUT IN HIGH-RAINFALL AREAS

ZAMBIA RECORDS BUMPER HARVEST IN 2024/2025 FARMING SEASON

CLEAN AND AFFORDABLE ENERGY

SIFAZ LEADS THE DISCUSSION ON SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE PRACTICES

PLANT HEALTH CRUCIAL FOR HUMANS

GOVT ENACTS PLANT HEALTH ACT, NUMBER 1 OF 2025

IFAD MISSION VISITS SMALL LIVESTOCK FARMERS IN THE COPPERBELT PROVINCE

E-SLIP’S ANIMAL DISEASE CONTROL INTERVENTIONS CHEERS FARMERS IN CHINPANGALI

CLIMATE CAMPAIGNERS CALL FOR BIODIVERSITY

ZAMBIA AND UK COLLABORATE TO ADVANCE VETERINARY LABS AND ANIMAL HEALTH PROGRAMS

CHIEF CHISOMO AND FARMERS CALL FOR FRA TO HIKE FLOOR PRICE FOR MAIZE

ZAMBIA LOSES ABOUT 172,000 HECTARES OF FOREST LAND ANUALLY

PLANT HEALTH CRUCIAL FOR HUMANS

ZARI TAKES LEAD IN MACADAMIA NUT PRODUCTION

THE SWEET COMEBACK How Dates Are Seeding Prosperity in Africa’s Dry lands

FROM HOE TO HORSEPOWER As the Tractor Revolution is Uplifting Zambian Agriculture

FROM SOIL TO SOUL Why Agroecology is Africa’s Recipe for the Future

EMPOWERING THE SOIL As MDI Calls for More Extension Officers to Revolutionize Zambian Agriculture

Planting Hope, MDI Calls for Drought-Resilient Crops to Safeguard Farmers’ Futures.

ZAMBIA’S YOUTH CHALLENGED TO DRIVE AGRICULTURAL GROWTH

CHICK START MASTERY Secrets of poultry pros revealed

FARMING TAKES FLIGHT As Drones Deliver a New Dawn for Zambia

KEEP IT RUNNING The Farmer’s Guide to a Healthy Tractor

GOVT EARMARKS BEEF EXPORT

OVER 1,000 FARMERS ACCESS MECHANIZATION SERVICES

GROWING CABBAGES IN HOT WEATHER

A CLASSROOM WITHOUT WALLS: FARMER FIELD SCHOOLS, EMPOWER KAZUNGULA FARMERS

Pellets of Hope: How a New Cooking Solution is Saving Zambia’s Forests and Empowering Lives

ELITE PONGAMIA PINNATA: THE MIRACLE TREE RECLAIMING ZAMBIA'S LOST LANDS

From Ashes to Action: How Carbon Trading is Saving Zambia’s Vanishing Forests

Nature’s Nectar: How Bees, Forests, and Farmers Are Rebuilding Zambia’s Future

MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE URGED TO TAP CDF

SOUTHERN PROVINCE FARMERS ELATED WITH FISP E-VOUCHER MODALITY

IMPORTANCE OF MECHANISATION

CATEGORIES OF FARM RECORDS

ZAMBIA BREWERIES RECENTLY KICKED OFF SORGUM PLANTING SEASON IN ZIMBA DISTRICT OF SOUTHERN PROVINCE.

TBZ,NCZ PACT SPARKS NEW HOPE FOR ZAMBIA’S TOBACCO FARMERS

ZARI PARTNERS WITH SNV TO ENHANCE SOIL HEALTH

25 METRIC TONS OF LEMON FRUITS TO KENYA

ABOUT US

Terms and Conditions for AGRI BUSINESS NEWS LTD

SMALLHOLDERS BEGIN FISP CONTRIBUTIONS

NANSANGA FARM A SLEEPING GIANT - DR. MILNER MWANAKAMPWE

ALMOST 1,000 KILOGRAMME FISH SEIZED

27,900 FARMERS TO BE TRAINED IN CSA IN MUCHINGA PROVINCE BY DECEMBER

top-news

27,900 FARMERS TO BE TRAINED IN CSA IN MUCHINGA PROVINCE BY DECEMBER

By SEBASTIAN CHIPAKO

CLIMATE change is a phenomenon that has hit the country and the world over adversely. Zambia in particular has experienced grave implications especially in the agriculture sector which has uncovered enormous vulnerabilities of the sector.

Effects of climate change including frequent flooding and droughts have been major occurrences over the years in our country. These have had negative impact on production and productivity subsequently affecting national and household food security. Suffice to conclude that the entire food system has had serious disruptions.

A number of responses have been propagated by government and other cooperating partners operating in the spheres of tackling effects of climate change, adaptation, mitigation and regeneration of forest cover and the environment.

One of the most recent interventions by government is the World Bank funded US$300 million Zambia Growth Opportunities Programme for Results (ZAMGROW) project which covers the entire country. This programme promotes agricultural diversification and sustainability.

In Muchinga province, the project was ignited by a training of trainers from all the districts of the province in Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) which is earmarked to be rolled out to 27,900 farmers before the end of the year.

The Trainer of Trainers (TOT) targeted officers from the districts who in turn are expected to train camp extension officers. The camp extension officers are then expected to train 150 farmers per camp.

In opening remarks of the TOT held in Mpika, Principal Agriculture Officer, Fred Chikuta, emphasised the need for districts to strive to reach and exceed the set target and give CSA knowledge to the farmers.

He explained the five year project has a lot of activities planned, which have started with sustainability and climate smart agriculture trainings this year.

Mr Chikuta stressed that if the knowledge is to be fully assimilated by farmers, there is need for mind-set change adding that increased adoption levels will be key in actualizing the set objectives of the project.

“Most of the farmers in this part of the country use Chitemene system. Farmers use a piece of land for some time and abandon it for another piece of land when it is no longer fertile.  So the soil deemed infertile could be resuscitated for further use using these techniques,” he explained.

Mr Chikuta further revealed that the province targets to train 27,900 farmers in Climate Smart Agriculture in the province before the end of the year.

One of the participants, Clive Matengo, lamented the severity of the adverse effects of climate change coupled with bad agricultural practices such as the Chitemene system.

Mr Matengo, who is District Agricultural Coordinator for Kanchibiya, explained that huge chunks of land have been left bare exposing the good top fertile soils to the harshness of strong winds and floods.

He added that the project is timely and will help in restoring fertility of soils and enhance resilience of farmers to adverse effects of climate change.

A number of these CSA farming techniques have resounding rewards in the fight against adverse effects of climate change. These, to a larger extent have fostered resilience and mitigation among the farming communities where high production is still achieved amid effects of climate change.

Another participant of the training, Angela Mtonga, who is also Senior Agricultural Officer for Isoka District, revealed that the target set is achievable despite a few challenges that have been envisaged in mobilising the farmers during this period highly characterized by mass cultivation of farm land by farmers.

Ms Mtonga disclosed that a good number of camp extension officers have motor bikes which will make it easy to achieve the set target.

She has since appealed to the ZAMGROW project to consider procuring more motor bikes so that farmers are easily reached with these important lessons.

Some of the drivers of climate change such as poor agricultural practices are embedded in people’s culture and this requires a mind-set change to fully make a shift to new and more sustainable and environmentally friendly methods.

When this is done together with the roll out of CSA techniques it could potentially reduce the impact of adverse effects of climate change among the farming communities.

The devastating impact of droughts and floods in farming could largely be mitigated through these techniques and it is highly recommended that these are assimilated in the fabric of extension service delivery so that more farmers are trained continually. -NAIS

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

vivodkalugaBoype

вывод из запоя <a href=https://vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru>vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru</a> вывод из запоя круглосуточно калуга

pansimskBoype

частный дом престарелых <a href=https://pansionat-msk013.ru>pansionat-msk013.ru</a> дом престарелых

lecheniekalugaBoype

вывод из запоя круглосуточно <a href=https://vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru>vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru</a> лечение запоя

MarvinTop

<a href=http://claude.ai/public/artifacts/e249b96a-667b-4e7a-9fcd-8dcb24cda040>what is a drone</a> - learn to fly a drone

RufusEreno

Cheung, who regularly expresses hostility toward reporters on social media platform X, asserted in a Friday night post that, “some reporters have been caught” taking pictures of sensitive information and “eavesdropping on private, closed-door meetings.” <a href=https://kra--42---cc.ru>kra31cc</a> That claim came as news to White House press corps leaders, who are not aware of colleagues being “caught.” <a href=https://kra--44---at.ru>kra16</a> Early in Bill Clinton’s presidency, Clinton aides similarly attempted to bar journalists from the “upper press” area, causing an outcry. That ban was rescinded. <a href=https://kra---45--cc.ru>kra40c</a> Journalists had normal access to the offices during President Trump’s first term in office. But in his second term, Trump and his aides have taken several steps to stymie news coverage and circumvent traditional media outlets. <a href=https://kra41cc.net>kra13</a> Last winter, the administration blocked the Associated Press from attending some White House events, leading to a First Amendment lawsuit that is still working its way through the courts. <a href=https://kra---43-at.ru>kraken14</a> The administration has also stopped publishing transcripts of Trump’s remarks; has taken control of daily press pool assignments; and has invited fawning pro-Trump commentators to presidential Q&As. <a href=https://kra37a-cc.ru>httpskra37at</a> Some cabinet secretaries have followed Trump’s lead. Last month, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth implemented severe new restrictions for Pentagon press pass credentialing, leading virtually every major media outlet to reject the rules and give up access to the Pentagon complex. CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg contributed to this report. kra17 https://at-kra37cc.ru

Edwardwonna

Escazu Chocolates, a bean-to-bar chocolate shop in Raleigh, North Carolina, sources most of its beans from Latin America. The shop said it has always worked with smaller farmers and paid them three to four times the commodity price of cacao – which essentially sets the minimum wage. The spike in prices has pushed up what Escazu pays those workers as well. <a href=https://kra39-cc.com>kra25 at</a> Other cost-cutting measures include offering a smaller hot chocolate size, advertising non-chocolate ice cream toppings and moving to a cheaper location in Raleigh to save on rent. <a href=https://kra35cc.net>kra35 c</a> And like many small businesses in America, Escazu is being hit by President Donald Trump’s tariffs, affecting not just the chocolate, but also aluminum in its packaging. <a href=https://2krn-kraken.com>kra27</a> “The tariffs have hit every single piece of what goes into every single thing,” Tiana Young, co-owner of Escazu, told CNN. “There is no new normal.” kra10 cc https://kra3.net

pansimskBoype

пансионат для реабилитации после инсульта <a href=https://pansionat-msk013.ru>pansionat-msk013.ru</a> пансионат для реабилитации после инсульта

HectorCaw

Members of the White House press corps are now restricted from the press secretary’s office, the latest in a series of Trump administration actions to limit media access. <a href=https://kra45cc.net>kra40 c</a> The new rule says journalists cannot access what’s known as the “Upper Press” office space, where White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt works, “without an appointment.” This area has been accessible to White House correspondents for decades, supporting a free flow of information between the president and the public. <a href=https://kra-47cc.com>kra44 cc</a> The White House says the clampdown is due to security concerns. “This policy will ensure adherence to best practices pertaining to access to sensitive material,” a White House memo asserted on Friday night. <a href=https://kra-47at.net>kra42 at</a> In response, the White House Correspondents’ Association, which represents hundreds of credentialed reporters, said it “unequivocally opposes any effort” to limit journalists from areas that have long been accessible for newsgathering, “including the press secretary’s office.” “The new restrictions hinder the press corps’ ability to question officials, ensure transparency, and hold the government accountable, to the detriment of the American public,” the association said. <a href=https://kra-47-cc.net>kra42 сс</a> As CNN’s Jeff Zeleny explained, reporters routinely “wait in the hall” by the press secretary’s office and seek information from communications aides. “When there is breaking news, that often happens,” Zeleny said. Now, “reporters will only have access to a smaller set of offices of junior advisers, junior aides, junior press secretaries,” according to the White House. https kra42 at https://kra44-cc.net

alkogolizmkalugaBoype

лечение запоя <a href=https://vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru>vivod-iz-zapoya-kaluga017.ru</a> вывод из запоя круглосуточно

DanielPiott

Even the joy of Halloween will cost more this year, with less chocolate than in years past. <a href=https://kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqd-onion.org>кракен сайт ссылка</a> Expect more packages of tangy gummies, riding off a meteoric high last year. Your kid’s trick-or-treat bag may be filled with a lot of pumpkin-spice-filled-anything. And like last year, cocoa bean industry experts are expecting high price tags to be passed down to consumers. <a href=https://kraken2trfqodidvlh4aa337cpzfrhdlfldhve5nf7njhumwr7insta.com>kraken3yvbvzmhytnrnuhsy772i6dfobofu652e27f5hx6y5cpj7rgyd.onion</a> And with high cocoa prices, every producer from specialty chocolate makers to candy giants are changing up how they sell their treats. For consumers, this could mean less chocolate per package, higher prices and less cocoa content – meaning less chocolate-y chocolate – compared to before. <a href=https://kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqdonion.net>kraken5af44k24fwzohe6fvqfgxfsee4lgydb3ayzkfhlzqhuwlo33ad onion</a> Overall, candy is 10.8% more expensive this Halloween season than last year, according to an analysis of NielsenIQ data conducted by progressive think tank Groundwork Collaborative and shared first with CNN. That’s nearly quadruple the overall rate of inflation. <a href=https://kraken7jmgt7yhhe2c4iyilthnhcugfylcztsdhh7otrr6jgdw667pqd-onion.org>кракен ссылка</a> In 2024, Halloween candy prices only rose 2.1%, the analysis found. Halloween spending is no fun-sized matter. Americans shelled out $7.4 billion in Halloween chocolate and candy sales in 2024, a 2.2% increase from 2023, the National Confectioners Association said. кракен даркнет ссылка https://kraken2trfqodidvlh4aa337cpzfrhdlfldhve5nf7nj7instad.com