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Georgia pushes to bolster its food security
admin
2020-06-12
发布年2020
语种英语
国家国际
领域资源环境
正文(英文)

With reports suggesting COVID-19 could spark food shortages around the world, food systems experts and United Nations officials say countries must increase the resilience of their agricultural systems. We take a look at the nation of Georgia, in the Caucasus, and what is being done there to improve food security.

Land resources are limited in Georgia. Only 15 per cent of the country is cultivated, while 70 per cent is forests, bush, meadows and pastures.  

Due to climatic and landscape conditions, as well as unsustainable agricultural practices, more than a third of agricultural land is affected by degradation, erosion, pollution and soil damage. Around 4 per cent of farmland is vulnerable to desertification. 

Photo by Lisa Murray/UNEP
Photo by Lisa Murray/ UNEP

Overgrazing, poor forest management, loss of forest cover and unplanned urban sprawl are major drivers of land degradation in Georgia.    

The country is 70 per cent self-sufficient in vegetables, but only 8 per cent self-sufficient in wheat, according to official statistics.

The Ministry of Environmental Protection and Agriculture of Georgia and the Regional Environmental Centre for the Caucasus, a non-governmental organization, have been working since autumn 2016 on a project to introduce crop rotation practices in the Shida Kartli and Kakheti regions of central and eastern Georgia.

Map of Georgia showing projects. The map is based on this UN map
Map of Georgia showing projects. The map is based on this UN map

It is called Generating Economic and Environmental Benefits from Sustainable Land Management for Vulnerable Rural Communities of Georgia, or Greenlands.GE for short. Financed by the Global Environment Facility and implemented by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), it focuses on sustainable land management. It’s the continuation of a 2016-2019 project titled Landscape and Sustainable Land Management in Georgia

About 100 farmer households will take part in the pilot Greelands.GE project. Ultimately the project seeks to target 90,000 people. The farmers are being encouraged to rotate their crops. More than 1,000 hectares of land on which farmers used to cultivate only wheat are already being used to deploy crop rotation techniques to cultivate peas, maize, beans and buckwheat. The previous project  showed that crop rotation tripled the per hectare wheat yield.

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来源平台United Nations Environment Programme
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/282574
专题资源环境科学
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
admin. Georgia pushes to bolster its food security. 2020.
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