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ACDEP Financial Services
This project provides a model for facilitating and increasing access to credit and other financial services from banks by rural smallholder farmers, processors and other rural entrepreneurs.

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Health Projects
The health unit supports Primary Health Care Programmes to reach out to communities in new and innovative ways, exploring the use of communities own resources and capabilities

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The RESULT Project
The Project addresses the four basic elements of food security by increasing food availability, access, utilization and stability (i.e. resilience).

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Canadian Feed The Children (CFTC) and Association of Church Development Projects (ACDEP) have for the past six (6) years been jointly implementing the Resilient and Sustainable Livelihood Transformation (RESULT) Project in Upper East and Upper West Regions of Ghana. The project worth CAD$19 million is financed by the Government of Canada through Global Affairs Canada (GAC).

The project covers four main intervention areas including Crops, Livestock, Marketing and Income generating activities and Aquaculture with Gender, Climate Change and Environmental concerns being integrated alongside.

Description: <a href=https://cdn.ghanaweb.com/imagelib/pics/48230645.jpg" width="348" height="261" />Aquaculture was a grey area that the project explored to ascertain its potential, acceptability and practicability in northern Ghana; noting that post-colonial efforts to promote this venture failed to see the light of day.

 RESULT Project is near completion and as part of the exit strategy and to sustain the gains of aquaculture in the Upper East, a regional aquaculture forum was held in Bolga on the 11th and 12th October, 2017. The forum, which brought together water resources experts as well as government officials and fish producers, was themed: “Aquaculture Development in Upper East Region: the Role of Stakeholders.” The event was meant to sensitise stakeholders on the potentials of aquaculture in the region; for participants to share experiences and for ACDEP and CFTC to showcase the gains made so far under the RESULT project in the face of challenges and to solicit commitment of all stakeholders to aquaculture development in the region. The forum also sought to prepare an action plan for implementing strategies to increase aquaculture investment, production, processing and marketing in the Upper East region and to agree with key stakeholders and partners’ specific actions for handing over the project’s aquaculture activities to key stakeholders and institutions.

In his opening statement, the Executive Director of ACDEP, Malex Alebikiya said studies and work done in the region over the years clearly indicates that as a region we are not sufficiently using our water bodies for economic activities. We spend a lot of money, supported by donors, to construct dams and then we allow them to go waste except for livestock watering and construction purposes. “If we have to make a case for government’s investment in more water bodies in the region, then we have to be able to demonstrate that the current water bodies can be put into economic use and that is where we thought that there are two ways in which we can use the existing water bodies – economic activities in the water, and that is where aquaculture comes in, and economic activities around those water bodies, and that is where the dry-season gardening comes in.” stated the Executive Director.

Description: <a href=https://cdn.ghanaweb.com/imagelib/pics/83352671.jpg" width="363" height="272" /> Addressing the forum, the Upper East Regional Minister, Rockson Ayine Bukari, assured development partners at the forum of his cooperation for the continuous development of the region. “The Regional Coordinating Council’s doors are opened. As a servant of the people, my doors are opened. I’m prepared to serve you. Even if is midnight, if you call me, I will be ready to come out.” The Regional Minister observed with worry that fish supply in Ghana had been unacceptably low. Ghana, according to the statistics he quoted, locally produces only 400,000 tons out of the 1 million metric tons of fish it consumes annually.

“Fish is an important food product in Ghana, accounting for 60% of the national animal protein needs of the population. The deficit in fish supply in the country has been the concern of all stakeholders including government, researchers and development partners over the years. The initiative of the RESULT Project to increase fish production in the region to boost incomes of farmers and serve as an alternative livelihood support system is, therefore, very laudable and timely,” he observed. He entreated the private sector to join the fish business to help bridge the chronic deficit in supply.

“As a government, we concede that it would take the collective efforts of all stakeholders to tackle the challenges in the aquaculture sub-sector. As an underdeveloped sub-sector, many opportunities abound which require the involvement of varied stakeholders along the entire value chain. I wish to call on the private sector to consider investing in aquaculture so as to adequately produce fish to meet the widening demand gap,” the Regional Minister appealed.

A number of challenges that confront aquaculture in the region were highlighted at the forum, with specialists also bringing to light some measures taken thus far to address the challenges.
The challenges mentioned were “reduction in water levels, buffer zone invasion through farming activities, underdeveloped market for locally produced tilapia, high-priced feed, predators, poaching and input sourcing” among others.

Making a presentation at the gathering, ACDEP’s aquaculture specialist, Peter Kwame Akpaglo announced some containment measures which his sector had put in place against the threats. Some of the measures were:

  • harvesting water when the water level is still high;
  • sensitisation of water users association on judicious use of water during the off seasons;
  • encouraging grassing and cropping outside the buffer zone to minimise siltation;
  • training of groups on fish processing and preservation methods to provide alternative market for the locally produced fish;
  • provision of predator nets for project communities and provision of security to forestall poaching.

Description: <a href=https://cdn.ghanaweb.com/imagelib/pics/24974418.jpg" width="341" height="255" />The forum noted that aquaculture has a great potential in the Upper East Region which can be harnessed for economic benefits leading to reduction in unemployment and increase in food security. It was observed that the RESULT Project has increased fish production, household incomes and improved household nutrition in beneficiary communities.

 At the end of the forum, stakeholders pledged to support and promote sustainable development of aquaculture in the Upper East Region. It was recommended that the district assemblies should incorporate aquaculture development into their medium-term development plans and support interested entrepreneurs with capital, to invest in the aquaculture value chain, under the Small and Medium-scale Enterprise programme.

A similar event was held earlier in the Upper West Region on 8th and 9th August 2017, where similar commitments were made by stakeholders to support, promote and sustain aquaculture activities in the Upper East Region.

Background

Programme rationale. A number of studies of Ghana’s political economy have underlined the broad disparities between the North and the South in terms of economic development and well-being. Like other similar countries in the region, the major inequality in Ghana is between urban and rural areas. But unlike these countries, the second major cleavage is between the North and the South, followed by the gender disparities. There is a strong need to bridge it to prevent north-South inequalities from leading to tensions and instability in view of the widening of this gap, of which the most important underlying factor is out-migration which result in a loss of human resources and initiative. It is therefore crucial to address rural poverty in the northern region of Ghana with a special focus on women, the gender divide being the major cause of inequality in the rural areas in northern Ghana.

Programme objectives. The overall goal of the Programme is to achieve sustainable agriculture and rural livelihoods and food security for the rural poor particularly those depending on marginal lands, rural women and vulnerable groups in Northern Ghana. The specific objective is to develop inclusive and remunerative commodity and food chain to generate agriculture surplus production and orient it towards remunerative in southern Ghana and abroad. Read More.......

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 Northern Rural Growth Programme (NRGP) - Success Stories

In recent years, the growth of Information and Communication Technologies has brought issues of communication and rural access to information to the forefront of the development agenda of most development organisations.Norbert-handing-over-ICT-equipment-to-Loloto-Health-Centre-300x225

The ICT4D project was therefore initiated to strengthen the ICT capacity of the ACDEP Secretariat and its member NGOs to ensure that the information and communication needs of the ACDEP and its members, and rural communities are addressed at the right time, in the right location and in the right format for the purposes of rural development. The project is also expected to address the high cost of accessing, collating and preparing information in a form that is easily consumable by the stations.

The project was piloted from 2008 – 2009 at five sites. Currently, the project is being implemented over a three-year period at five Primary Health Care facilities, where ACDEP is supporting field staff and community members to maximise the use of ICTs for communication, knowledge exchange and community-level health extension education.

Our vision, as far as ICT use is concerned, is a network of members that use ICT as a tool to respond to the development information needs of member NGOs and rural communities in a way that would enhance the impact of member NGOs, rural livelihoods, and national development.

The project is supported with funds from CORDAID, while IICD provides technical support and capacity building.

Project Objective for 2010 – 2012:

The main objective of the ICT4D project is to increase the capacity of five ACDEP-member Primary Health Care facilities to develop and integrate ICT tools for health education and information exchange within the Primary Health Care programmes in northern Ghana.

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