Caldono, located in the mountains of the department of Cauca, southwestern Colombia, was one of the municipalities hardest hit by the country’s armed conflict.
But after more than three decades of violence, the signing of the Peace Agreement in 2016 gave Caldono’s indigenous, campesino and Afrodescendent communities hope for a better future.
To contribute to this endeavour, FAO and ART collaborated with the communities of Caldono on multiple productive and agricultural projects that were both economically viable and environmentally sustainable.
To this end, they strengthened the socio-entrepreneurial and commercial capacities of the organizations, provided technical assistance and promoted market linkages to foster local development and investment.
FAO targeted its efforts on rural development, enhancing the productive capacities of indigenous, campesino and Afrodescendent communities through technical assistance and infrastructure investments, so that these communities would not have to uproot themselves, but would be able to find prosperity for their families in their own territory instead.
Between July 2017 and December 2019, the FAO-ART partnership supported over 1,000 families in the municipality of Caldono, generating indirect benefits for nearly 5,000 families.
FAO and ART implemented a territorial value chain strategy that made it possible to invigorate the local economy. The strategy prioritized the municipality’s main sources of income and employment, the production of coffee, fique, sugarcane and blackberries, all of which had potential for higher yields per area planted.