The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has entered into a $6.57 million financial agreement with the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE) to enhance climate-resilient crop value chains in Bangladesh. The project, titled “Building Climate Resilient Livelihoods in Vulnerable Landscapes in Bangladesh,” aims to improve the resilience of communities and ecosystems to climate change while enhancing livelihoods through increased value addition in agricultural food systems.
Under the agreement, the DAE plans to bring 16,000 hectares of land under climate-resilient agricultural practices, train 32,000 farmers on adaptation, provide machinery and stress-tolerant seeds to 19,000 vulnerable farmers, establish rainwater catchment structures, women-led vermicompost pits, and community seed banks. Additionally, the DAE will develop and disseminate crop advisory information, facilitate the selling of 45,000 tons of produce, and provide business training to entrepreneurs and micro SMEs.