FAO in Afghanistan

New ADB Grants to Support Food Security and Health Services for the Afghan People Through United Nations

Officials from Asian Development Bank (left) and FAO (right) sign the USD 100m grant to provide agricultural production support to more than 309,000 farm households for the cultivation of wheat, summer crops, vegetables, and livestock protection. ©ABD
05/10/2023

MANILA, PHILIPPINES (20 September 2023) — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) today approved $400 million in grants to protect the welfare and livelihoods of vulnerable Afghan people, particularly women and girls, and ease the adverse impact of the ongoing humanitarian crisis. The support, delivered through the United Nations (UN), will address emergency food needs, enhance domestic food production for medium-term food security, and provide core health services for the Afghan people.

The Expanding Essential Food Security and Health Services Project (Support for Afghan People) will provide off-budget direct financing to three UN agencies, helping to bridge the financing gap for immediate support. 

Afghanistan has faced an unprecedented humanitarian crisis compounded by climate change and intense droughts, floods, and earthquakes. An estimated 85% of its population live below the poverty line. Women and children are disproportionately affected with many women-led households suffering a lack of food and reduced access to services given women’s restrictions on movement outside their homes.

To address food security, a $100 million grant will enable the World Food Programme (WFP) to provide critical food assistance to more than 1.32 million acutely food-insecure people, prioritizing women-headed households and highly vulnerable groups. The WFP will also implement Food Assistance for Training initiatives to help equip mainly women with employable and entrepreneurial skills, and alternative livelihoods along the agricultural value chain, such as fruit and vegetable processing. This will support women’s potential for more sustainable livelihoods and income.

A $100 million grant will enable the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) to provide agricultural production support to more than 309,000 farm households for the cultivation of wheat, summer crops, vegetables, and livestock protection. Smallholders including women-headed households will receive high quality agricultural inputs such as climate-resilient seeds. More than 2.1 million people are expected to benefit from the FAO support.

Through a $200 million grant, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) will expand existing support and provide core health services in 10 provinces across the country covering about 7.5 million people. This includes basic health services such as newborn and maternal care, and essential hospital services, including nutrition and surgical care. The World Bank will support the same health services in Afghanistan’s 24 other provinces.

Implemented in close coordination with the UN, World Bank, and other partners, the project will contribute to the international community’s ongoing efforts to support the people of Afghanistan and prevent the country from falling into universal poverty. The grants are financed by the Asian Development Fund which supports ADB’s poorest and most vulnerable developing member countries. 

The project will be implemented outside of the de facto government’s systems and in line with ADB’s approach to fragile and conflict-affected situations. Third-party monitoring firms will be engaged by the UN agencies to monitor implementation and verify the delivery of support to target beneficiaries.

The project builds on ADB’s existing $405 million grant project, approved in January 2022, to support food security, essential health and education services for the Afghan people via the UN. More than 75% of this funding has been disbursed.

ADB maintains the hold it placed on its regular assistance in Afghanistan effective 15 August 2021.

ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members—49 from the region.