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The Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries launched Timor-Leste’s first National Seed Laboratory with the appointment of 15 new seed officers during an inauguration ceremony last Friday.

At the ceremony Minister Assanami inducted 2 Pure Seed Officers, eleven District Seed officers, a Seed Analyst and the Coordinator of Seed Quality Control who have been training in-country and abroad for the past 2 years to take over responsibility for the seed testing laboratory.

With the development of the National Seed System for Released Varieties seed producers can now submit their produce for official testing to determine and display its quality, giving them a distinct advantage in the marketplace.

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The Minister of MAF, Mariano Assanami Sabino, had an ocular observation inside the Seed Laboratory after its inauguration last Friday.

The laboratory will conduct tests on physical purity and germination percentage (which determine seed cleanliness and viability) and moisture content which affects storability.

“The inauguration of this laboratory is essential to guarantee our farmers and farmer’s associations have access to good quality seed”

Depending on the level of testing the seed goes through it will be categorised as either ‘Certified’ or ‘Truthfully Labeled’. If the produce doesn’t meet the required standards it will be rejected, thereby providing the quality assurance seed buyers and farmers need so they can purchase seed with confidence.

Both Certified and Truthfully Labeled seed must go through laboratory testing to receive a label of authenticity, but Certified Seed is additionally inspected in the growing phase by an Authorised Field Inspector to determine genetic purity, measuring the contamination of the seed by other varieties of the same species.

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Seed Laboratory national and district officers that will take responsibility for the seed testing

“The inauguration of this laboratory is essential to guarantee our farmers and farmer’s associations have access to good quality seed,” Chief of the MAF’s Seed Department, Lucio Nuno, said.

Quality control safeguards will contribute to the development of Timor’s seed business by protecting farmers from receiving seed of poor quality from seed producers. The labels for Certified and Truthfully Labeled seeds will include the crop type, variety type, seed class, expiry date and quality indicators from the tests.

“The introduction of Certified seed is important. It guarantees the seed is good quality but it also pushes everyone to buy and sell seed of a higher grade,” the Chief of a Baucau seed producing group, Alberto Carlos de Jesus, said.

The seed tests will also provide useful information to seed producers, seed quality control officers, and policy makers who can now monitor and respond to data from the laboratory.

For example, Seed Quality Control Officers will have records of seed expiry dates and will be able to withdraw expired seed from the market.

MAF-SoL provided the laboratory with basic equipment including a seed germinator, purity table, moisture tester, seed divider and sampling rods, used to draw varied samples from different levels of a storage container, which will all contribute to the accuracy of seed testing results.

What is food security?

On April 16, 2013, in English, Uncategorized, by Nick Appleby
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Seeds of Life likes to say that ‘food security starts with seed security’, and every day, we work to make Timor-Leste secure in seed and food. But for many people, the concept of food security itself is a foreign one, so here’s a brief rundown on what food security means and what it means for Timor-Leste.

To oversimplify the topic, people are food secure when they don’t have to worry about where their next meal is coming from.

At the 1996 World Food Summit it was agreed that food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for a healthy and active life.

Food security around the world

Global food production has increased substantially over the past few decades. However, this increase in production has not equaled population growth for the same period.

Furthermore, a number of factors have contributed to dramatic food price spikes, which in turn contributed to the food crisis of 2008.

Some of the many cited causes of continuing food insecurity are the rising price of oil, climate change, failed agriculture regulation, a lack of anti-dumping mechanisms and a lack of market access for farmers.

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Timor-Leste’s farmers rely on root crops when maize and rice stores run out.

Food security in Timor-Leste

There are two major discussions around food security in Timor-Leste. One focuses on urban populations, such as in Dili and Baucau and concerns the importation of and access to cheap rice.

The second discussion, and the one that Seeds of Life works to address, is rural food security. Rural food security is all about the sufficient production of rice and maize among farmers.

Rural food insecurity in Timor-Leste is classified as seasonal. That is, farmers experience a ‘hungry season’ while their rice and maize crops are growing but cannot yet be harvested.

There are two phases of food shortage in Timor-Leste. The first is when maize and rice stores are about to finish but there is still a supply of root crops, like cassava and sweet potato.

Consumption of food during this phase drops to 1-2 meals a day for adults and 2-3 meals a day for children.

The second phase occurs when all staple crops are in short supply, this is known as the ‘hungry season’ and many farmers rely on foraging, borrowing or selling animals and assets for food.

The second phase occurs when all staple crops are in short supply, this is known as the ‘hungry season’

Households at risk of food insecurity in Timor-Leste are those that grow insufficient maize throughout the year and cannot afford to buy more when they run out. Our annual surveys have shown that as many as 1 in 3 households are at risk.

However, in recent years this number has been declining by around 5.4% per annum. This same drop has been shown to correlate with an increase in wealth over the same period.

(Left) Maria Theresa Ximenes works at the research centre and also has her own crops at home where she grows corn and legumes.

Sufficient maize production is a crucial step in getting rid of Timor-Leste’s hungry season.

What else can be done to make Timor-Leste food secure?

Seeds of Life is working to improve food security by researching and releasing improved, public domain varieties of seed and planting materials, the use of which can increase farmer’s yields by as much as 138% in one stroke (as with sweet potato variety Hohrae 3).

The Ministry of Agriculture is working to increase agricultural productivity, recently through an increase in extension services. There are now over 400 Suco Extension Workers in Timor-Leste providing advice and assistance to farming families.

In the future MAF-SoL and other agricultural organisations will be focusing on improving soil fertility, post-harvest storage, water security and land preparation and weeding techniques.

All of these improvements will go towards increasing food security and improving the lives of Timor-Leste’s farming families.

 

Community Seed Production Groups in the Lospalos sub-district supported by the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries and Seeds of Life, harvested their first Sele variety maize seed crop of the season last Friday.

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The largest harvest of maize in the Aileu district has begun with six Community Seed Production Groups in Remexio sub-district of Aileu harvesting eight hectares of maize planted in December last year. (more…)