USAID organizes workshop on agriculture networking

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DLP Report
PESHAWAR
The United State Agency for International Development (USAID)’s Economic Recovery and Development Activity (ERDA) organized a one-day workshop.
The aim of the workshop was to enhance the capacity building and business-to-business networking of the agriculture inputs dealers from different parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, including the merged districts.
The workshop also provided a platform to some of the leading national and multinational agriculture input providers participating from across the country.
Titled as ‘Building Capacities and Creating Partnerships’, the workshop was designed to strengthen public-private sector engagement as well as provide networking opportunities to agriculture inputs providers, dealers, and suppliers of seeds, fertilizers, and pesticides.
In his opening remarks, the ERDA’s Deputy Chief of Party, Shakeel Kakakhel said, ‘Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has been experiencing a decline in agricultural farm sizes and land holdings because of increasing population and division of land among family members in successive generations.
In order to overcome this limiting factor, it is important to increase land productivity through optimal application of quality agriculture inputs, adoption of advanced agricultural practices and utilization of modern technologies.’
The workshop was attended by agriculture department officials, and shared the government’s regulatory frameworks, ongoing initiatives, and planned interventions with regards to the registration, supervision, and facilitation of agriculture inputs providers.
Agriculture department officials covered standard operating procedures for the registration of agriculture input providers, innovative practices and modern technologies to address plant protection challenges, and safeguards in the use of pesticides to reduce their environmental and climate impacts.
Speaking at the workshop, the Director Plant Protection at the Directorate General Agriculture Extension, Muhammad Naveed Khan said, ‘we are keeping a close liaison with the agriculture inputs service providers and dealers in order to facilitate them properly’.
He further stated that their mandate was to improve the quality standards of agricultural inputs and to regulate the sale, distribution, manufacturing, standardization, registration, and monitoring of agriculture inputs service dealers and companies.
The presentations were followed by a panel discussion comprising agriculture research and development experts from the public and private sectors.