DUBAI: The International Centre for Biosaline Agriculture (ICBA) recently hosted a ceremony to launch a Millet Demo Farm to contribute to the objectives of the International Year of Millets and COP28 related to climate action, sustainable agriculture, food security and nutrition.
Established in collaboration with SELCO Foundation, the Millet Demo Farm is designed to showcase the whole value chain for millets – from seed production to consumption – and raise awareness about its benefits for climate change adaptation in agriculture.
Dr. Tarifa Alzaabi, Director-General of ICBA, said, ‘As we work towards more sustainable and resilient agrifood systems, we must embrace neglected and underutilised crops such as millets. Not only are they climate-smart but are also nutrient-dense. So, millets can be a powerful tool in our efforts to adapt agrifood systems to climate change and improve food security and nutrition. But this requires that we conduct applied research studies and scale up innovations to achieve a last
ing impact.’
Nirmita Chandrashekar, Senior Program Manager at SELCO Foundation, said, ‘It is critical that we look at the entire MENA region adopting decentralised and sustainable clean energy-driven processing at the farm gate for smallholding farmers. Together with ICBA, we are ready to transfer knowledge to all countries where ICBA works.’
The launch was attended by over 40 delegates, including officials from the UAE Ministry of Climate Change and Environment and the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), and private-sector CEOs.
Participants learned about ongoing millet trials at ICBA’s research station and post-harvest processing machines, and tasted a variety of millet-based dishes.
The millets and technologies presented at the Millet Demo Farm are a result of ICBA’s extensive research and collaboration with different partners, including FAO and SELCO Foundation. The purpose is to promote the production and consumption of millets in the Middle East and North Africa and other regions through techno
logy transfer and capacity development.
For more than two decades, ICBA has been at the forefront of research and development on climate-resilient and nutritious crops suited to arid and salt-affected environments, having identified and introduced a range of stress-resistant crops like quinoa, sorghum, pearl millet, and Salicornia in various locations.
The centre operates a unique genebank with over 16,000 accessions of around 300 drought-, heat- and salt-tolerant plant species, including millets, from more than 150 countries and territories. This collection also includes around 270 accessions of 70 wild and cultivated plant species from the UAE; about 5,000 accessions of barley, which is one of the largest in the Middle East; as well as more than 1,300 accessions of quinoa, which is the largest of its kind outside South America.
To date, the centre has distributed over 1,700 samples of millet germplasm to partners in 29 countries. The centre has also studied millet cultivation in Morocco, Togo, Tunisia, T
he Gambia, and Uzbekistan.
Source: Emirates News Agency