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Phase 2: Scaling

• Establishing systems to monitor and map waste streams that would be used as inputs in frontier agricultural systems • Determining the most effective entry points for insect and hydroponic farming into existing industries, such as waste management, animal feed production, human food production, and others • Establishing effective means of communicating among farmers, processers, and consumers • Creating networks among farmers to provide a stable supply of food products to the market • Improving pest and disease management in both systems • Refining processes for detecting harmful trace metals in foods and substrates • Pursuing energy efficient ways to carry out production, including the use of renewable energy • Creating a digital portal to match supply and demand for inputs, products, and substrates

The insect farming project in Kenya’s Kakuma refugee camp could serve as a model for other insect production pilots (see box 4.1).The pilot trained refugees in cricket farming techniques. The project started out with a pilot cricket farm and provided training to 15 refugee household heads. Since then, the project has trained more than 80 household heads in rearing and processing farmed insects. These household heads—who have fled from conflict in countries like Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Sudan—are now producing crickets for household consumption and animal feed. DanChurchAid is planning to scale up the initiative by training more farmers and distributing starter kits to more refugee households. The project shows the potential for insect farming to provide livelihoods and incomes for marginalized communities, even in FCV situations.

The hydroponic project in West Bank and Gaza could serve as a model for other hydroponic pilots (see box 5.2).1 In 2012, the pilot established nutrient film technique and wicking bed production systems to increase local incomes, nutrition, food security, women’s empowerment, and the competitiveness of the agricultural cooperatives sector. The pilot established 35 nutrient film technique units and 52 wicking bed units with marginalized and underprivileged families in remote areas of the Bethlehem and Hebron governorates. The pilot included education modules at a local technical school to train students in these technologies. The families consumed most of the food that was produced and sold the surplus to local markets. This pilot has since advanced and produces different crops in new systems.

PHASE 2: SCALING

Once the pilots are completed and the lessons learned from those efforts are recorded, they can be applied to launch larger-scale frontier agricultural operations.

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