Jump to content

Living with the Soil/Soil - A Key Component of Development Cooperation

From Appropedia

Since the drought disasters of the seventies, the Sahel region has been a focus of development cooperation. One key objective has been to stabilise farming systems, and combat desertification. For example, attempts are made to tackle the root causes of poverty and hunger in countries such as Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Chad.

Further focuses are the upland regions of East Africa, South-East Asia and the Andes of Latin America. In these regions, high population density and crop farming on steep slopes cause soil erosion and other forms of soil degradation. In these mostly poorly accessible regions, natural resource management is accompanied by equally important measures of rural development.

Development cooperation can also be appropriate in areas with fertile soils, however. A number of tropical and subtropical regions possess very good potentials for crop and animal farming. Yet high precipitation and temperatures cause rapid soil degradation. Maintaining fertile soils is an important aim of national and international development plans, since these soils can generate high yields if managed intensively and correctly.

Page data
SDG
Authors Ericblazek
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 12 pages link here
Views 6 page views (analytics)
Created March 30, 2006 by Eric Blazek
Last edit December 16, 2025 by Felipe Schenone
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.