updated: 23.09.08
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Katsina State Agricultural and Community Development Project

The problem of land degradation is particularly serious in the northern area of Nigeria on the border with Niger. Land there is arid, agriculturally marginal, environmentally fragile and densely populated. Settlers have encroached on communal grazing land, and high winds and flash floods have caused heavy erosion. Water is scarce and vegetation is depleted either as a result of overcultivation or overgrazing.

The project was designed to assist the newly created state of Katsina in building capacity to address the problem of population pressure on fragile resources. It worked to increase food production and thereby improve incomes and food security for the poorest villages, especially small-scale farmers with less than 2 ha of land, households headed by women, and landless people. The goal was to halt and reverse environmental degradation and improve resource management at community level. Project components included:

  • land conservation, repasturing and reforesting
  • introduction of small-scale irrigation schemes
  • village and community development to improve basic services
  • improving access to credit
  • technical assistance and training

The project used widespread cultivation of vetiver and andropogon grasses as cost-effective methods of land conservation. These drought-resistant grasses help protect fragile soils by providing natural barriers to wind and water erosion, and are also a source of fodder for livestock grazing.

 

Source: IFAD

In this section
Contact information
Mr Perin Saint Ange
Country programme manager
IFAD
Via Paolo Di Dono, 44
00142 Rome, Italy
Tel: +39 0654592448
Fax: +39 0654593448
p.saintange@ifad.org
Facts and figures

Total cost: US$28.8 million

IFAD loan: US$12.2 million

Cofinancing: United Nations Development Programme (US$2.0 million)

Duration: 1993-2001

Geographical area: northern area of Katsina state

Directly benefiting: 36,000 households

Status: closed

Partners
  • Katsina State Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources
  • United Nations Development Programme
  • International Development Association