USAID and Project Mercy Transfer Cross-Bred Dairy Heifers to Dairy Farmers

For Immediate Release

Monday, November 25, 2013
After being raised at the Project Mercy farm, these two heifers will be transferred to Project Mercy beneficiaries.
After being raised at the Project Mercy farm, these two heifers will be transferred to Project Mercy beneficiaries.
William M. Canter, The London Group
 

Chacha, Amhara, Ethiopia – Project Mercy in partnership with the U.S. Government, through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), today provided its first round of pregnant cross-bred dairy heifers to five selected household dairy farmers in the Chacha District of the Northern Shewa Zone, Amhara Region. With these heifers, the recipients will be able to feed their children and sell surplus milk to supplement their family income.

Through the four-year grant to Project Mercy, USAID is building the capacity of smallholder farmers by providing technical assistance and training to improve cow milk production and household income in the district.

“Transferring ownership of these five heifers to Project Mercy beneficiaries is the next step in implementing the training managed through USAID’s AGP-Livestock Market Development project,” said USAID Mission Director Dennis Weller. “This mentoring and guidance is linked directly to the targeted households, who are working to establish a business, as a next step to moving beyond subsistence farming and into a revenue producing environment.”

USAID's Gary Robbins delivers a heifer to one of the first five selected household dairy farmers in the Chacha District.
USAID's Gary Robbins delivers a heifer to one of the first five selected household dairy farmers in the Chacha District. Through the four-year grant to Project Mercy, USAID is providing technical assistance and training for the farmers.
William M. Canter, The London Group

The five dairy farmers who received the heifers are among 83 dairy household farmers who were trained on improved dairy farm management through the USAID project. Zelekash Wolde Amanuel is one of five household women farmers who received a pregnant cross-bred dairy heifer during the ceremony. For Zelekash, one of the forty-four women trained under the project, it is her first time to be involved in managing a cross-bred dairy heifer. She received the three-day training and is confident that she will get the best of it as she stated, “I have the experience in keeping Ethiopian indigenous cows. They give a small amount of milk. I am expecting to get more milk from the cow that I received today.”

USAID’s five-year project is part of President Obama’s Feed the Future Initiative in Ethiopia. Project Mercy is a not-for-profit relief and development organization based in the United States and Ethiopia providing aid, comfort and support to alleviate human suffering and overcome systemic poverty in Ethiopia. USAID has cooperated with Project Mercy over the last decade on emergency food aid and medical assistance.


Press Release Heifer Delivery 11-25-13 [PDF, 61 KB]

Remarks by Gary Robbins, USAID, Heifer Delivery 11-25-13 [PDF, 259 KB]

Related Resources

USAID Ethiopia: Agriculture and Food Security

USAID Ethiopia: Feed the Future

USAID Ethiopia: Global Health Initiative

USAID Ethiopia: Nutrition