Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Alternative Versions
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
NIGER 1968. Feasibility study for the industrial processing of millet
NIGER 1968. Feasibility study for the industrial processing of millet
NIGER 1983. Agricultural, Development
EGYPT 1968. Near East War Victims
EGYPT 1968. Near East was victims
NIGER 1983. Agricultural development
IRAQ 1969. Development of rural, youth work
NIGER 1983. Agricultural Development
ETHIOPIA 1968. Locust swarm
LIBERIA 1970. Feeding of students and trainees
CHILE 1968. Wold Food Programme assists community development
NIGER 2019. Sahel
ERITREA 1968. UNDP Inter-Regional Desert Locust Project in East Africa
BENIN 1984. Improving techniques in fish-processing cooperatives
BURKINA FASO 1970. Seeds and equipment for vegetable gardens for rural education centres
BURUNDI 1968. Agricultural Technical Institute
INDIA 1968. Gathering hay for livestock
GHANA 1969. Volta River land clearance and settlement
BURUNDI 1968. Agricultural Technical Institute at Kitega
MOROCCO 1967. Rural development
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
NIGER 1968. Feasibility study for the industrial processing of millet
1968. Niger. In the first millet processing plant in the world at Zinder, workers are packaging flour in 10 kilo bags for distribution.
01/01/1968
Credit
©FAO photo
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
75.19 MB
Unique ID
UF213U1
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
The economy of Niger is based on agriculture and livestock. The principal crop is millet, an essential and traditional cereal for the nutrition of the population. Millet production, however, is not carried out on a commercial scale. In recent years the farmers of southern Niger have turned increasingly to cultivation of cash crops, mainly cotton and peanuts. Obliged to buy additional food they tend to purchase imported rice and corn rather than millet, as the high cost of transporting millet makes it as expensive as imported rice or corn and the labor involved in preparing millet for human consumption is much greater. Traditionally the women of the household manually grind the grains of millet to split the hull and then remove the inside kernel by hand. There is increasing
opposition to this time-consuming labour. Processes for mechanically removing the bitter hull from the millet grains have been devised without destroying the nutritional value which the cereal possesses. Thus the Government of Niger, with the assistance of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) as Executing Agency is investigating the transformation, marketing and processing of millet grain in order to increase incentives for its production and commercialization on a national scale, and a pilot plant is now in operation in Zinder.