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Armenia's Farmers: Got Milk?

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  • Armenia's Farmers: Got Milk?

    ARMENIA'S FARMERS: GOT MILK?

    by Olivia Katrandjian
    The Civilitas Foundation
    www.civilitasfoundation.org


    Milk production is one of the main sources of income for rural communities
    in Armenia. Although production has increased by more than 50 percent over
    the last 15 years, the country remains a net importer of milk and relies
    heavily on imported dairy products. There is a serious demand for milk and
    milk by-products in Armenia - major dairy producers say they would buy
    three times the amount of milk available today.

    Due to a lack of capacity, however, the industry functions at less than 30%
    of its potential.

    Sargis Manukian, an Armenian farmer, learned from a friend about the
    Civilitas Foundation's Dairy Production Assistance Program, which sells
    milking machines to farmers on a microfinance basis.

    `He has been calling me three times a day asking what he needs to sign up,'
    said Sona Nazaryan, a staff member at Civilitas in Yerevan. `One day he came
    from Stepanavan, which is almost 100 miles away.

    He didn't have an appointment - he just phoned and said `I'm downstairs.' I
    told him that without the papers, I couldn't write up a contract.'

    `Don't you worry, I have all the papers with me!' he said.

    `What about the letter from the person who guarantees there is a market for
    your milk?' Sona asked. How could he have the letter? She hadn't given it to
    him.

    `Of course!' he said. He pulled a folded piece of paper out of his pocket.
    It was blank except for the village mayor's stamp and signature. `Here is
    the paper! Whatever you write, he guarantees it.'

    After filling out the paperwork and getting an actual guarantee, Sargis got
    his milking unit. He has been using it for over a month now and has already
    made his first payment.

    He is one of many farmers to benefit from the program, which provides
    milking machines to Armenian farmers through a loan guarantee system. The
    farmers agree to pay back the purchase price of the unit in installments
    with no interest. The payback rate is 100 percent. The repaid funds are used
    to purchase additional units, thereby increasing the number of
    beneficiaries.

    The Civilitas staff have become dairy `experts'. `The current average milk
    yield estimation shows that at least 35 cows are required for one farming
    household of six to sustain itself,' says Hayk Petrosyan, Programs
    Coordinator at Civilitas. `Yet, the average milk-producing household has
    only three to 10 cows. Farmers rely on manual labor to milk their cows,
    which has prevented them from increasing the size of their herd. A milking
    unit allows a farmer to improve efficiency and increase quantity of produced
    milk, thereby increasing yearly net income by approximately 30 percent.'

    With support from the Polish Government, Civilitas is also building milk
    cooling and collection centers in two villages. A cooling center will enable
    these communities to store enough milk to make it economically beneficial
    for the dairy producer to come pick it up. Each center involves 75 percent
    of each village's population. The centers will be completed in May and
    used on a loan basis with no interest.

    Civilitas not only supplies the equipment but also provides training for
    the farmers on the use and maintenance of the milking machines and cooling
    centers. This helps the farmers become self-reliant. A self-reliant farmer
    is an economically self-sufficient one. Self-sufficiency, in turn, allows
    the farmer to participate in and build a civil society. Armen and Nadya
    Ekserciyan of Argentina also believe in this notion, which is why they were
    the project's first sponsors.
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