Farmers
in sentence
1667 examples of Farmers in a sentence
With that reservoir of historical information and sophisticated algorithms, the company offers fee-based advice to
farmers
through an intuitive online portal.
Al-Shabaab is blocking most international relief agencies from accessing famine areas, preventing famine victims from reaching help, and forcing
farmers
back to their barren land, where most will die unseen and unrecorded.
For example, approximately a quarter-million Indian
farmers
have allegedly committed suicide over the last 16 years, despite unprecedented economic growth.
Local farmers, fishermen, and environmentalists have spent months protesting a planned six-reactor nuclear-power complex on the plains of Jaitapur, south of Mumbai.
Farmers
and food retailers can connect directly through mobile phones and distribution hubs, enabling
farmers
to sell their crops at higher “farm-gate” prices and without delay, while buyers can move those crops to markets with minimum spoilage and lower prices for final consumers.
The strengthening of the value chain not only raises farmers’ incomes, but also empowers crop diversification and farm upgrading more generally.
Even if America were to reverse its current policies and reduce its domestic agricultural subsidies--just one reason that Latin Americans view the FTAA as rank hypocrisy--a focus on export-oriented agriculture in Ecuador tends to favor large landowners over small farmers, shifting income from the poor to the rich.
They put little effort into creating a level playing field for farmers, since they knew America couldn't compete in agriculture.
Individual
farmers
do not need any bureaucratic directive to decide whether to plant more potatoes: an increase in prices creates an incentive to plant more potatoes; a decrease in prices is a signal that they should plant less.
In trying to move
farmers
from subsistence to commercial agriculture, Munk argues, there are just too many missing pieces.
But a more intangible factor is no less important: many of the networks on which
farmers
have traditionally depended to cope with these disasters have been lost or degraded.
For the world’s poorest smallholder
farmers
and pastoralists, unpredictability is the only constant.
Today, though, farmers’ personal networks are weakening.
Farms are being hit more frequently by severe weather, and violent conflict is increasing in poverty-stricken regions; these and other variables are uprooting
farmers
everywhere.
One of the best ways to do this is by investing in new technologies that enable
farmers
to connect with information and institutions that can decrease uncertainty and mitigate risk.
With access to data, markets, and financial services,
farmers
can plant, fertilize, harvest, and sell products more effectively.
For example, in Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia, local extension services are delivering real-time weather data to vegetable
farmers
via SMS.
In West Africa, private companies such as Ignitia are expanding the accuracy and precision of SMS weather alerts to remote
farmers.
And
farmers
throughout the Global South are turning to SMS-based services for technical support that allows them more easily to adopt new crops and growing techniques, with benefits for both natural resources and household income and nutrition.Connectivity also improves the functioning of markets by allowing
farmers
and herders to access accurate price information, coordinate transport and other logistics, and facilitate easier exchange of perishable but nutritious foods such as animal products and vegetables.
Mobile money and price information also enable pastoralists to adjust herd sizes to changing environmental conditions, while enabling
farmers
to secure seeds and fertilizer for future harvests.
The challenge is to broaden access to all of these tools, and to ensure that they meet the needs of the
farmers
who use them.
This demands that mobile technologies take into account differences in gender, education, and resource levels among farmers, and are responsive to changing circumstances.
The impact and success of these tools and programs should be monitored and evaluated, with ineffective approaches being improved or replaced.I’ve conducted research in rural communities around the world, and one of the features they all have in common is the difficulty that
farmers
and pastoralists confront in accessing reliable information about markets, weather, and financing.
Farmers
everywhere, but especially in developing economies, need the support of digital communities.For hundreds of millions of people, information is the difference between food security and hunger.
And
farmers
throughout the Global South are turning to SMS-based services for technical support that allows them more easily to adopt new crops and growing techniques, with benefits for both natural resources and household income and nutrition.
Connectivity also improves the functioning of markets by allowing
farmers
and herders to access accurate price information, coordinate transport and other logistics, and facilitate easier exchange of perishable but nutritious foods such as animal products and vegetables.
I’ve conducted research in rural communities around the world, and one of the features they all have in common is the difficulty that
farmers
and pastoralists confront in accessing reliable information about markets, weather, and financing.
Farmers
everywhere, but especially in developing economies, need the support of digital communities.
Just as American presidents looked foolish when they bent US foreign policy to the dictates of American wheat
farmers
in the 1970’s and 1980’s, European governments that are prepared to mortgage Asian security to a restless China also command no respect.
Ten
farmers
grow the bamboo, and 25 builders craft it into environmentally friendly bikes that can be used on Ghana’s bumpy roads or exported overseas.
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