Project ID: 49135

Chinese Government provides RMB 8.2 million grant for Phase 1 of Juncao Mushroom Technical Cooperation Project (Linked to Project ID#65032)

Commitment amount

$ 1473370.043995716

Adjusted commitment amount

$ 1473370.04

Constant 2021 USD

Summary

Funding agency [Type]

China Ministry of Commerce [Government Agency]

Recipient

Fiji

Sector

Agriculture, forestry, fishing (Code: 310)

Flow type

Grant

Infrastructure

No

Category

Intent

Development (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Commercial

Development

Representational

Mixed

Financial Flow Classification

ODA-like (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Official Development Assistance

Other Official Flows

Vague (Official Finance)

Flows categorized based on OECD-DAC guidelines

Project lifecycle

Status

Completion (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Pledge

Commitment

Implementation

Completion

Suspended

Cancelled

Milestones

Commitment

2014-01-01

Actual start

2014-09-01

Actual complete

2016-09-01

Geography

Description

In 2014, the Chinese Government provided an RMB 8.2 million (FJD 14 million) grant to the Government of Fiji for Phase 1 of the Juncao Mushroom Technological Cooperation Project. The purpose of this project is to train Fijian farmers in the Juncao technique for cultivating mushrooms. Chinese Professor Lin Zhanxi perfected the Juncao technique for growing mushrooms from grass in the 1980s and has shared his technology with developing countries with the help of the Chinese Government. The Fijian Ministry of Agriculture, working with the Fujian Agriculture & Forestry University (FAFU), and the China National Engineering Research Center of JUNCAO Technology collaborated through this project to increase the supply and domestic sale of mushrooms in Fiji. Phase 1 commenced in September 2014. It involved the construction of a 3,100 square meter demonstration farm (by Hebei Construction Group) — at the Legalega Research Station on the outskirts of the city of Nadi — with processing workshops, laboratories, training classrooms, trainee dormitories, and a 20,000 square meter nursery garden. The purpose of the demonstration farm (known as the Juncao Technology Demonstration Center) was to grow mushrooms and teach farmers how to cultivate them successfully so they could start their own small businesses. Phase 1 also involved involved testing the viability of the Juncao Technology (using dried and chopped grasses to grow mushrooms), and educating officials from the Ministry of Agriculture as well as local farmers about this technology. Because Juncao is a simple technology (requiring no soil and only a small area of space) and the mushrooms grow relatively quickly, demand for training was high. At least 7 trainings were held, and the project successfully commercialized Juncao mushrooms on Fiji’s domestic market. To help local farmers start mushroom businesses, the Chinese Government donated implements, machines, and other planting materials to the Fiji Ministry of Agriculture in late September 2016 (marking the end of Phase 1). The first harvest in late 2014 yielded approximately 200 kilograms. A hectare produces around 500 tonnes of fresh grass, which can produce 150 tonnes of fresh mushroom. Fiji is now expected to produce 30,000 kilograms of mushrooms annually, which will help diversify its exports and alleviate rural poverty. As of late January 2015, the project has helped Fiji with producing about 1 million bags of edible and medicinal mushrooms, and technical personnel training of more than 100 people.

Additional details

This project is also known as the Mushroom Project, the First Phase of the Juncao Technological Demonstration Program, and the First Phase of the Juncao Mushroom Technology Demonstration Center Project. The Chinese project title is 中国援助斐济菌草技术合作项目. Phase 2 of the project, which the Chinese Government also financed, supported additional trainings and the creation of a production line for mushrooms at the demonstration site – from seedlings to packaging and storage – that produces an annual output of 300 tones of fresh mushrooms (as captured in Project ID#65032). As the project continues, it hopes to provide Fijian’s with new livelihood options, as well as going some way to address the nation’s food import dependency.”

Number of official sources

10

Number of total sources

19

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Details

Cofinanced

No

Direct receiving agencies [Type]

Fiji's Ministry of Agriculture [Government Agency]

Implementing agencies [Type]

JUNCAO Technology China National Engineering Research Center [Miscellaneous Agency Type]

Hebei Construction Group International Engineering Co., Ltd. [State-owned Company]

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University [Government Agency]