{"id":22018,"date":"2021-11-22T14:47:30","date_gmt":"2021-11-22T14:47:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/highatlasfoundation.org\/?p=22018"},"modified":"2021-12-14T14:58:16","modified_gmt":"2021-12-14T14:58:16","slug":"agricultural-development-in-morocco-flourishes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wordpress-haf.ddev.site\/agricultural-development-in-morocco-flourishes\/","title":{"rendered":"Agricultural Development in Morocco Flourishes"},"content":{"rendered":"
Agricultural Development in Morocco Flourishes<\/a>,\u00a0Borgen Magazine<\/strong>.<\/p>\n WESTBURY, New York \u2014 The High Atlas Foundation is helping Morocco\u2019s local communities determine how they choose to develop their land and grow out of poverty sustainably. Like those in the northern Atlas Mountains, Morocco\u2019s most vulnerable communities have long suffered\u00a0from water scarcity<\/a>, shaky access to land and unregulated grazing rights. These\u00a0hardships make it difficult<\/a>\u00a0for many individual planters to harvest profitable yields on their produce and further strain their labors. Also, their reliance on traditional and overplanted crops like barley, corn and dates deliver low profits. Additionally, they exasperate a low diversity of fruits and vegetables in the poorest of the nation\u2019s regions. While\u00a0Morocco\u2019s red fruit production<\/a>\u00a0saw an increase of 84% last year, many of the nation\u2019s poorest farmers were not included in the agricultural boom. Yet, one organization is working to reverse this in a new sustainable development model, improving agricultural development in Morocco.<\/p>\n Peace Corps volunteers who served in Morocco founded The High Atlas Foundation in 2000. They committed themselves to sustainable development through several human development initiatives. These included sustainable agriculture, education, health and women\u2019s empowerment. Working with local and international institutions, the High Atlas Foundation works to facilitate development through participatory planning.<\/p>\n The Borgen Project spoke with Dr. Yossef Ben Meir, The High Atlas Foundation\u2019s Founder and President, in an interview to learn more about the High Atlas Foundation\u2019s approach to sustainable development and advocacy. \u201cI\u2019m a former Peace Corps volunteer who served in Morocco in the early 90s, and others, having gone through that two-year experience, were moved in terms of the severe life challenges of particularly rural communities,\u201d said Dr. Yossef Ben Meir. \u201cA number of us founders served in mountainous areas. I served in the south side of the High Atlas region.\u201d<\/p>\n Unfortunately,\u00a070% of agricultural land<\/a>\u00a0only generates 10 to 15% of agricultural revenue in rural regions, and 80% of arable lands are located in arid or semi-arid areas. Still, only 15 percent of the country\u2019s\u00a0lands are irrigated<\/a>. Ben Meir says the dependence on the traditional subsistence approach to growing barley and corn keeps people down. He says the potential for waterborne diseases, high unemployment and a lack of access to basic government services is a barrier for rural families. The transition from barley and corn to more lucrative fruit trees and medicinal plants may have challenges.<\/p>\n \u201c80% of rural incomes comes from agriculture,\u201d said Ben Meir. \u201cMost people who experience poverty in Morocco are in rural places and overcoming this dependency on or generational reliance on barley and corn. It\u2019s one of many factors that have to be addressed in the agricultural value chain, but one of them is the generation of fruit trees so that farmers and farming families can make that transition.\u201d<\/p>\nThe High Atlas Foundation<\/h4>\n
Agricultural Land Struggles<\/h4>\n
Steps Taken<\/h4>\n