AAPI Press Release

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USAID Awards New Project in Bangladesh to IFDC December 14, 2010 – MUSCLE SHOALS, Ala. – The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded IFDC, an international center for soil fertility and agricultural development, a five-year cooperative agreement in support of the Accelerating Agricultural Productivity Improvement in Bangladesh (AAPI) project. Ishrat Jahan, AAPI project coordinator and IFDC country representative in Bangladesh, said, “The AAPI project is designed to strengthen and re-orient agricultural production systems in Bangladesh. The project goals are to improve food security and accelerate income growth in rural areas by increasing agricultural productivity on a sustainable basis. Improved resource use efficiency in agricultural production systems will be a priority.”

Selina Begum is a successful business owner who has received technical assistance from IFDC. Her new business manufactures much-needed fertilizer briquettes for farmers.

The US $24.1 million project will focus on improved soil fertility management and the rapid diffusion of the proven fertilizer deep placement (FDP) technology. FDP technology will enable farmers to increase rice yields by up to 25 percent while applying 33 percent less nitrogen fertilizers. IFDC pioneered the development of FDP – a technology that reduces nitrogen losses significantly – and introduced it to Bangladesh. FDP is an important technology that has great potential to substantially improve crop yields using less fertilizer and is well-suited to rice production. FDP technology is consistent with balanced fertilizer use because multi-nutrients are incorporated in each FDP briquette. Importantly, FDP technology reduces nitrogen losses (to the atmosphere and water systems) by up to 50 percent when compared with conventional fertilizer application techniques. Working to improve resource use efficiency in agriculture production systems, the AAPI project will support water management systems such as alternate wetting and drying (AWD), a water-saving technology that lowland (paddy) rice farmers can apply to reduce water use in irrigated fields.

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Very similar to urea deep placement (UDP)

P.O. Box 2040 Muscle Shoals, AL 35662 USA Phone: +1(256) 381-6600

Fax: +1(256) 381-7408

www.ifdc.org


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