CMCFeature-From crisis to cultivation: Haiti’s small farmers build resilience one seed at a time

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Haiti small farmers building resilience
FAO works to distribute high quality seeds in Haiti to stabilize crop production (Photo courtesy FAO/Nour Azzalini)

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, CMC – For years, low-quality seeds have been a concern in Haiti, with continual climate shocks and political insecurity adding to the existing challenges that farmers face in their attempts to grow food.

Instead of having seeds that sprout reliably, farmers contend with batches that may grow only 40 or 50 percent of the time. This not only diminishes their yield and profit but also decreases their ability to sustain their livelihoods.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is working with the Ministry of Agriculture in Haiti to change this by localising the seed economy and training members of organized seed banks known as Groupements de Production Artisanale de Semences (GPAS).

“We realised that most of the seeds were of doubtful quality, that is to say they were not adapted to certain climate conditions… and as long as they are not well-adapted and are not good quality, we will have weak production,” Pierre Frantz Jacques, a former farmer and one of FAO’s seed bank project managers told UN News.

There are now over 200 GPAS located throughout Haiti, which cultivate high-quality seeds to distribute to other farmers to increase farmers’ yields and reduce dependency on foreign seed and food imports.

Especially today, these groups play an essential role, with more than half of the country facing emergency food insecurity and with agricultural production threatened by armed violence due to increased gang activity.

“GPAS, in providing seeds of quality, contributes to the improvement of agricultural productivity and food security in communities,” Jacques said.

A beginning amidst catastrophe

Around two-thirds of Haiti’s population relies on agriculture for their livelihoods, and most of them are small farmers. However, due to recent globalization forces, these farmers produce only 40 per cent of Haiti’s food, resulting in an untenable food situation that has left Haiti dependent on exports.

Throughout the past decades, various FAO programmes in Haiti have worked to support seed production as one approach to reducing the trade deficit. The GPAS programme in particular was revitalized in 2010 following the catastrophic 7.0 earthquake, which devastated Haiti and its agricultural sector.

During this humanitarian crisis and while helping with the provision of emergency assistance, FAO looked beyond the immediacy of the situation and began considering what it would mean to rebuild the agricultural sector.

“Immediately, we need to have resources from humanitarian assistance dedicated to resilience activities. You have to prepare for later from the beginning,” said Pierre Vauthier, FAO’s Representative in Haiti.

In 2010, this meant recognising that seed systems in Haiti were insufficient, with many farmers dependent on external sources and varieties of low quality permeating the formal and informal market.

From emergency to resilience

This is where GPAS came in, providing them with high-quality, first-generation seeds (semences de base) to jumpstart their enterprises. The groups were also trained in best practices for cultivation, harvesting, and financial management.

While this training does rely on scientific research and technological advances, it also seeks to deploy local knowledge of ecosystems.

In this vein, ultimately, it is the GPAS farmers who pick the seed varieties they want to cultivate, with many choosing local species that are already well-adapted to the environment and already a part of local agricultural traditions.

“The farmers and locals know their environment, all the particularities. They know the type of soil, the type of climate. And this knowledge is passed down from generation to generation,” Jacques said.

Additionally, FAO works to provide seed banks with silos and other tools to practice proper storage. This is particularly important during climate shocks, enabling farmers to protect their stocks against extreme weather events better.

“We can consider the seeds as an adaptation tool which allows farmers to continue to cultivate crops even during extreme conditions,” Jacques said.

Ultimately, a program like GPAS is at the heart of what FAO does, Vauthier said. Yes, FAO facilitates humanitarian assistance, but its real expertise lies in what comes after, in creating self-sustaining communities.

“Resilience can give communities back dignity. It can make your brain think in a very different way, not as assisted but as someone taking control of his own life,” Vauthier said.

One seed matters

Haiti is facing a protracted crisis — 1.3 million people displaced, almost six million facing emergency food insecurity, impending climate shocks for which the country is ill-prepared, and armed violence which is brutalising communities.

In this context, it may be hard to believe that one seed matters. But for FAO, sometimes change needs to be small, to be locally sustainable before it is exported to the entire country. These changes may not be revolutionary, Vauthier said, but they do work and they do last.

Seed banks are much the same, according to Jacques.

“What happens is that farmers are less dependent on other human beings. They are capable of producing their seeds… they will contribute to reinforcing autonomy and food security,” he said.

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