The Green River Project in Nigeria promotes and supports women’s agricultural cooperatives through vocational training, microcredit, and financial education to increase their incomes and improve their living conditions.
It has introduced microcredit to farmers, increased the employability of young people and women and is committed to developing sustainable businesses as well as promoting small and medium-sized enterprises in large commercial centres.
The Project, an initiative started in 1987, involves more than 2,500 farmers per year in the Niger Delta (in the last five years). Seventy-five co-operative societies (50 in the Land area and 25 in the Swamp area) were formed and registered at the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Sixty per cent of the participants in these co-operatives are women.
Through these initiatives, we distributed high-yield agricultural crops and multifunctional tool kits, set up fisheries, trained women in home economics, set up co-operatives and organised schemes to show how to increase capacity.
Similarly, since 1999 we have focused on training young people and women in technical and vocational skills, training round 3,800 young people and women in a range of sectors
In the rural areas in which NAOC operates, the high numbers of women working in agriculture are evident. It is women who are most involved in growing vegetables and crops, weeding fields and rearing, processing and selling livestock and fish, especially at the subsistence level. That is why women are the main beneficiaries of our activities. For example, GRP organises an annual farmers' day, on which outstanding farmers from the previous season are rewarded with cash prizes and new equipment. GRP therefore plays a key role in activities for thousands of women, like the enterprising members of the Olugbobiri Women Multi-purpose Co-operative Society, who make bread for their community as well as selling it in neighbouring villages. This initiative lets them earn a weekly wage.