USAID’s Mission Director to Georgia, Peter Wiebler (left), makes a speech at the opening of the cold storage facility located at a new seed model farm in Akhalkalaki. Yurik Unanian (center), the Mayor of Akhalkalaki, and Nair Iritsian (right), the chairperson of the Akhalkalaki city council, listen in.
Georgia Seed Potato Model Farm Officially Open
Dignitaries, researchers, and private sector representatives gathered this week in southwestern Georgia to celebrate the opening of potato seed model farm that will provide ideas, training, and high-quality seed to potato farmers throughout the country.
Georgia seed - USAID The seed model farm is one part of the USAID Potato Program in Georgia, a multi-faceted intervention to improve potato seed systems in the country.
Potato is known as 'second bread' to many Georgians due to its popularity, but potato productivity levels remain low in the country due to pests and diseases in seed potatoes and a lack of healthy planting materials.
The International Potato Center (CIP) is leading the initiative, lending its experience to facilities such as the seed model farm and providing expertise for laboratory, field, and greenhouse-based aspects of the program.
CIP's regional leader for Central Asia and Caucasus, Rusudan Mdviani, says the potato program will take its true strength from Georgian partnerships.
Rusudan Mdviani, CIP's regional leader for Central Asia and Caucasus:
“Right now we are collaborating with the Agricultural Advisory Service and Javakheti Agro Company, which have allocated greenhouse space and fields for our work. In exchange, we will provide training for their employees.”The event began in Akhalkalaki, where participants visited a cold storage unit that can hold up to 22 tons of seed potato for distribution.
In the afternoon, they traveled to a seed model farm in Akhaltsikhe, where they toured an indoor seed production laboratory in which 19 potato varieties (supplied by CIP) are being multiplied in-vitro through a technology called apical rooted cuttings.
Eight hundred of these cuttings were given during the event to an FAO project for establishing four demonstration plots. The demonstration plots will be used to educate and inform farmers in the region about the importance of quality seed potato for improved production.
Peter Wiebler, USAID's Mission Director to Georgia:
“The seed model farm is a key piece for building improved incomes and livelihoods in the country.”
“We want the Georgian economy to become stronger and develop and we are pleased with the progress of this program in the past year and we are optimistic for good results….”
“All the pieces of this program will increase yields for farmers and place nutritious potato in the marketplace at affordable prices. And, what's more, our work with the private sector will create jobs for Georgians.”
USAID's Mission Director to Georgia, Peter Wiebler (left) and Rusudan Mdviani (right), CIP's regional leader for Central Asia and Caucasus, inspect freshly-bagged potato seed at a new seed model farm in Akhalkalaki.
Through the course of the project, it is expected that at least 50% of the participating farmers will become certified quality seed producers, providing improved seed potatoes to more than 15,000 smallholders farmers.
The expected income gains from this network are expected to be worth approximately USD 8.7 million per year in Georgia.
Every potato seed generated and sold in Georgia will mean fewer dollars going abroad.
Makhare Matukatov, USAID Potato Program project coordinator in Akhalkalaki:
“Right now, we buy seeds from Holland and Germany for as much as eight million Euros annually.”
“We hope the demonstration fields will entice more farmers to join our project and elevate the potato sector to new heights.”
Apetenak Zandarian, a member of the Potato Producer Network in Georgia, holds a bag of disease-free potato seed cultivated at the seed model farm in Akhalkalaki. High-quality seed such as this will increase yields for potato farmers throughout Georgia. The Potato Producer Network was established within the USAID Potato Program.
Increasing competitiveness of the Georgian agriculture sector will not only increase food security and self-reliance in times of crisis but also boost the country's export profile and advance high-value job creation.