Job creation through innovation

Local news, 17.05.2021

SDC is harvesting positive results from promoting innovation in the agro sector: two success stories from the Westbank

Fostering innovation to create jobs: Asmaa Mustafa from Nablus has increased the  productivity of her nursery by introducing a solar powered heating systems with technical support of an SDC/ Oxfam project for young entrepreneurs
Asmaa Mustafa from Nablus has increased the productivity of her nursery by introducing a solar-powered heating systems with technical support of an SDC/ Oxfam. ©SDC

Promoting innovation to create jobs and prospects for Palestinian youth and women is a key objective of the Swiss Cooperation Programme for the Near East 2021-2024. The gradual expansion of this portfolio will be given high priority in the coming years.

While the SDC is developing new initiatives to harness the opportunities of digitalisation, it can point to many positive results achieved by promoting innovation in the agri-food sector in partnership with Oxfam. Here are two examples from the West Bank:

Asmaa from the village of Qabalan/Nablus is a young graduate agro-technician. In her family's small nursery, she grows seedlings for lemon and orange trees, as well as ornamental plants such as fragrant white gardenias. Looking for ways to increase the productivity of the family farm, Asmaa developed a solar-heated warming mattress that equalises soil temperature and speeds up the germination and rooting process of seeds and seedlings during the cold winter months. The innovation, introduced with technical and financial support from an SDC/Oxfam project, makes it possible to reduce production costs and increase the productivity of the nursery, resulting in additional income for Asmaa and her family.

Young family entrepreneur in the Jordan valley is cultivating dwarf figs to tap in a market niche with technical support of an SDC / Oxfam project
Young family entrepreneur in the Jordan valley is cultivating dwarf figs to tap in a market niche with technical support of an SDC / Oxfam project. ©SDC

Ihab from the village of Tammoun near the Jordan Valley is also going down innovative paths: In a 20-metre-long and 10-metre-wide greenhouse, he grows dwarf figs that ripen a month earlier and provide higher yields than conventional figs. After graduating from an agricultural college, Ihab worked in a nearby settlement, where he acquired the practical know-how and the first seedlings to start his own business. Ihab's fruits are tasty and ready to capture a niche market in Palestinian cities. The gifted agrotechnician now plans to cross the imported high-value crop with conventional local figs to create a hybrid variety that is more resistant to local soil and weather conditions.