Iran Willing To Share K-Farming Techniques With Malaysia
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | February 24, 2009 by

Iran said the system had helped the country to transform its agricultural sector, resulting in high yield agricultural production, enabling the country to increase its export
Iran, which has attained a 94 per cent self-sufficiency in food production, is willing to share its knowledge-based farming system (k-farming) with Malaysia and other Muslim nations in modernising farms especially in rural areas.
Iran deputy agriculture minister Dr J. Khalghani said the system had helped the country to significantly transform its agricultural sector, resulting in high yield agricultural production, enabling the country to increase its export.
Under the system, farmers are sent to one of the country’s 60 special education centres, located mainly in strategic rural areas, where they learn specific techniques to improve farming.
The curriculum was very practical and flexible and farmers took only courses which helped them in improving the yield of a particular crop they were cultivating, he said.
In an exclusive interview with Bernama ahead of the three-day Developing Eight (D8) Ministerial Meeting on Food Security beginning here tomorrow, Khalgani said a farmer who cultivated rice, for example, would take up a course pertaining to rice growing.
Apart from rice, Iran is also the producer of wheat, sugar beet, sugar cane, fruit, nuts and dairy products.
Khalghani, who will be leading his country’s delegation to the eight-nation meet, said another factor which boosted Iran’s agricultural production was research and development (R&D).
“The ministry has 5,000 research centres all over the country, and all researches can be readily implemented.
“Each year we get 4,000 to 5,000 project papers, and out of this we implement about 1,200 projects,” he added.
Besides research centres run by the agriculture ministry, he said, the science and technology ministry and universities had their own agriculture, biotechology, nuclear and nano research facilities.
Khalghani said Iran would also like to contribute its technical and practical experience not only to the eight Islamic countries in the D8 grouping but also to other countries.
On the Food Security conference, Khalghani said Iran would propose the following:
+ To set up a common market within the grouping;
+ To set a standard on scientific research which could be internationally accepted;
+ To increase technical and scientific cooperation among member countries; and
+ To set up a mechanism to support each other in times of shortages or price escalation.
Besides Iran and host Malaysia, six other countries attending the meeting are Egypt, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Turkey and Nigeria.
Saudi Arabia, Brunei and Qatar would attend as observers.
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