This is what true peace looks like. Start with the switch over to fruit trees in particular and then start the long trek toward full reforestation.
Afghanistan fully forested would be a paradise and a cool home to tens of millions. it is not particularly difficult either once you apply fog traps to feed the root of a nearby tree. That Dutch system allows the tree to be fully rooted and a passive fog trap supplies a water surplus that encourages ground cover as well. Small as it is though, it is still a capital investment.
What this item tells us though is that the tide has turned and a blossoming agricultural investment environment will quickly revolutionize this country. After all they are next door to 1.3 billion Indians and 1.1 Billion Chinese for the mere effort of building proper roads and railways and surely they are not idiots.....
How Greenhouses Are Warming Afghanistan up to Peace
By Nick Fouriezos • MAR 01 2018
https://www.ozy.com/acumen/how-greenhouses-are-warming-afghanistan-up-to-peace/85040
Abdul Hadi is a farmer in a village in southern Afghanistan.
For more than a decade, he has wrestled with the difficult landscape,
producing wheat and other sustainability crops despite failing
irrigation systems and harsh winters. “Less than half of the farmers
could afford to irrigate their farmland by water pumps,” Hadi told U.S.
government workers two years ago, “and the rest of the lands were left
barren. Even some of the farmers were obligated to leave their
villages.”
The opium capital of the world — Afghanistan produces
some 70 percent of the global supply — sees many farmers like Hadi
choose to start lucrative poppy fields over difficult legal crops. The
trade props up an otherwise nonexistent economy and at times has funded
terrorism, according to reports from United Nations investigators. Today, though, farmers
are increasingly being equipped with the tools to find profit in the
straight and narrow. In fact, humanitarian organization Roots of Peace
released a report confirming …
Afghan
farmers can annually make around $11,500 for grapes and almonds, $9,000
for walnuts and $6,500 for Golden Delicious apples — compared with only
about $4,500 per hectare from growing opium.
Those are
valuable hauls, considering that Afghans typically make about $1,889 per
year, according to the Average Salary Survey. Since American forces
entered Afghanistan post–9/11, development agencies such as the U.S.
Agency for International Development have worked to build out irrigation
systems and greenhouse technology in a country where three-quarters of
its 35 million citizens are involved in the agriculture industry.
Early
efforts focused only on “food security crops,” such as wheat or corn.
But a tactical shift in recent years has encouraged farmers to grow and
sell high-priced crops like pomegranates, grapes, raisins and saffron.
Initially, it was challenging to build an export market for those crops,
and a lack of dependable transportation made it difficult to move
goods. However, demand for Afghan’s new favorite foods is growing, says
Gary Kuhn, president of Roots of Peace, which has worked in the region
since 2003. “This year, we took 20 traders to Gulfoods in Dubai [the
largest food show in the world], and they got deals for $20 million [per
year]. For those guys, it was a huge thing. Two years before that, they
got deals for $1.5 million.”
Helping build a new export crop economy is just another element of
soft power, aimed at waging the war on terror with the promise of
employment. It’s still difficult for Afghan farmers to sell at home —
more than nine-tenths of their crops are exported to other provinces or
out of the country. And good faith built slowly over years of tilling
soil together can be destroyed when errant drone strikes and other
military activities harm citizens. Trust “certainly can be lost”
quickly, acknowledges a USAID agricultural development adviser, who
spent years working in the Kandahar region and asked that his name be
withheld out of consideration for partner agencies such as the
Department of Defense and the Ministry of Counter Narcotics.
And
certainly there are geographical challenges that keep some farmers from
benefiting. The sandy deserts have poor soil, and water is scarce. The
nation relies mostly on “snowmelt, rivers and groundwater,” says the
USAID adviser. “Look at it on Google Earth: You see slivers of green,
with all this brown, and it makes you wonder how they possibly manage to
grow anything.”
With the government of Afghanistan, the U.S. is
trying to address some of those challenges. The Kandahar Food Zone
Program, a $45.4 million USAID project that expires this August, has
rehabilitated 17 irrigation canals, providing water to more than 22,000
households and 27,000 hectares of farmland. An increased emphasis on
both low- and high-tunnel greenhouses has reaped benefits too. In Farah
province, more than 100,000 greenhouses are expected to generate in
excess of $30 million for Afghan farmers by the end of the year,
according to a report from the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.
“This
is plastic-on-bamboo kind of stuff, it’s really cheap,” says Kuhn, but
the simple structures make a huge difference, given the harsh Afghan
winters: “You can start your crop early because you can protect the
seedlings. And then when it’s warmer, and there’s no frost, you can take
them out and your crop is off to the races.”
Assuredly,
these are small steps. But if Afghanistan keeps building its economy,
perhaps the Forever War could someday end with grapes and almonds rather
than drones and rockets.
No comments:
Post a Comment