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Farming without soil helps to tackle Somalia's hunger crisis
DW (English)
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4 months ago
In Somalia, internally displaced women who previously depended on food aid are growing spinach, tomatoes and leafy greens in hydroponic units with nutrient-rich water instead of soil.
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00:00
For these women in Somalia, working here is something very special.
00:06
They planted everything themselves.
00:09
And even though there's little water here in the region,
00:12
spinach, chard and cucumbers are thriving in the hothouses.
00:17
These beautiful farms have changed our lives.
00:23
We used to get tomatoes and spinach from the market and cook it at home.
00:29
Now we grow vegetables like spinach ourselves.
00:34
Our life has positively changed and we have many benefits.
00:39
The women have learned how to cultivate vegetables without soil.
00:43
They mix core coconut fibre from coconut shells with some water and plant the seeds in it.
00:51
SOS Children's Villages Somalia launched the project in Baydoa in 2022.
00:58
Farming is very difficult in this largely arid country.
01:01
Extreme weather events are making it even more difficult.
01:07
At SOS, we thought of initiating a new method called hydroponic farming,
01:16
which can cope with climate change.
01:22
After the recurring droughts and floods, which forced people to evacuate their farms,
01:27
we introduced hydroponic farming, which is quite new in Somalia.
01:31
The plants don't need much room to grow.
01:38
In a single hothouse, there are hundreds of pots in the pipes that are filled with water.
01:47
This water has been enriched with nutrients.
01:51
Like hundreds of thousands in Somalia, Amina Hassan has fled the conflict and extreme weather events.
01:58
The work in the greenhouse is crucial to her and her family.
02:03
She lives with her family in a camp for internally displaced people on the edge of Baydoa.
02:09
I have twelve children. Two of them died in the drought, but ten survived.
02:17
We spent one night in a town on our way to a village called Mador.
02:21
The drought continued, and as we walked, we spent the night in different places.
02:26
It was all due to a severe drought that had hit the country.
02:31
Training in hydroculture and hothouse cultivation is part of the program,
02:36
which is open to locals and people who have fled from other parts of Somalia.
02:41
Some 500 women and young people have taken part so far.
02:45
They're used to practice traditional arable farming.
02:48
We've been mostly teaching women this new method of farming.
02:55
We also taught a few men.
02:58
We mostly taught women because they're the backbone of the family
03:03
and are mostly engaged in food preparation and income generation.
03:08
That's why we decided to teach women about the hydroponic farming system.
03:15
Dotted around the city are 41 hothouses like this.
03:20
Each one is managed by 10 to 15 women.
03:23
They can harvest in all four seasons, producing enough food to cover their own needs and sell on the market.
03:31
Together, they have a turnover of the equivalent of approximately 5,200 euros a year.
03:39
Each woman earns some 43 euros a month.
03:43
To help build the hothouses, the organization gets funding from Germany and Sweden.
03:49
Each one costs 3,800 euros.
03:52
The water pumps are solar powered.
03:54
The government plays an advisory role.
03:58
The project enables the production of quality, nutritious food within a short time.
04:07
The introduction of cash crops through these initiatives not only feeds and benefits people,
04:12
but also generates income for local communities.
04:18
These efforts are essential in mitigating the adverse effects of climate change
04:22
and ensuring the well-being and livelihood of the affected populations.
04:29
Some of the vegetable crops are later planted out in sand to anchor the crop.
04:37
At first, many women were skeptical, but now they are convinced by the new approach.
04:43
We're asking the organization to expand greenhouse farming, so three to five people can share a greenhouse farm instead of 15.
04:53
We expect the organization to increase the number of greenhouses, since we've learned and now understand this method.
05:02
The pilot project in Baidoa is a success story.
05:07
SOS Children's Villages Somalia is planning to introduce hydroponics in other parts of the country.
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