Boosting Climate-Smart Potato Farming: Training of Trainers in Improved Practices for Smallholder Farmers with Disabilities in Rwanda

cg.authorship.typesNot CGIAR developing country institute
cg.authorship.typesCGIAR single centre
cg.contributor.affiliationAssociation for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa
cg.contributor.affiliationAccelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
cg.contributor.affiliationInternational Livestock Research Institute
cg.contributor.donorWorld Bank
cg.coverage.countryRwanda
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2RW
cg.coverage.regionAfrica
cg.coverage.regionEastern Africa
cg.creator.identifierJoshua Okonya: 0000-0002-9874-5021
cg.creator.identifierJohn Walker Recha: 0000-0002-1146-7197
dc.contributor.authorBarungi, Julian
dc.contributor.authorOkonya, Joshua
dc.contributor.authorIlakut, Ben
dc.contributor.authorRecha, John W.M.
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-04T20:18:30Z
dc.date.available2025-06-04T20:18:30Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/174978
dc.titleBoosting Climate-Smart Potato Farming: Training of Trainers in Improved Practices for Smallholder Farmers with Disabilities in Rwandaen
dcterms.abstractOver the years, Rwanda through its Rwanda Agriculture and Animal Resources Development Board has released several potato varieties with 10 new potato varieties released in 2023. Despite their good agronomic attributes that include high tuber yields, short maturity periods, tolerance to pest damage, resistance to common diseases such as late blight and potato viruses, very few smallholder youth and women farmers have adopted them. This is partly due to the high cost associated with purchase of quality declared or certified seed potato. Additionally, farmers especially youth and women have previously reported the limited technical knowledge in GAPs for production of certified and quality declared seed as one of the factors responsible for their low adoption of improved potato varieties and low yields. To address the challenge of low adoption rates and low yields, the training enhanced capacities of 75 participants (45 females, 30 males) in good agronomic practices in potato production and enhanced their access to improved potato varieties. The participants comprised women and youth farmer leaders, agro-input dealers, extension workers and seed potato store owners from Dukomeze Ubuzima Cooperative in Shingiro Musanze district of Rwanda. Through the support of the AICCRA project, ASARECA was able to hand over 2.5 tons of certified potato seed, 11 spray pumps, 200kgs of fertilizer, and assorted pesticides to 300 farmers belonging to the Dukomeze Ubuzima Cooperative, in Shingiro, Musanze, Rwanda as a starter pack for scaling the adoption of improved potato varieties.en
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Access
dcterms.audienceCGIAR
dcterms.audienceDevelopment Practitioners
dcterms.audienceExtension
dcterms.audienceFarmers
dcterms.audiencePolicy Makers
dcterms.bibliographicCitationBarungi J, Okonya J, Ilakut B, Recha, J. 2025. Boosting Climate-Smart Potato Farming: Training of Trainers in Improved Practices for Smallholder Farmers with Disabilities in Rwanda. AICCRA Training Report. Accelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research in Africa (AICCRA)
dcterms.extent31 p.
dcterms.issued2025-03
dcterms.languageen
dcterms.licenseCC-BY-NC-4.0
dcterms.publisherAccelerating Impacts of CGIAR Climate Research for Africa
dcterms.typeReport

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
ASARECA_AICCRA_Report_Rwanda.pdf
Size:
1.39 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
Report

License bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.75 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description:

Collections