Consumption of Orphan Crops for Healthier Crops and Diets (CROPS4HD) – Phase II

PROJECT TYPE: ONGOING

Project Duration: 2026–2029

Funding Partner: Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA)

Strategic Partner: SWISSAID

Geographical Coverage: National Coverage – Tanzania

Consortium Countries: Tanzania, Chad, Niger, and India

Africa’s food systems are increasingly challenged by climate change, biodiversity loss, changing consumption patterns, and overreliance on a limited number of staple crops. While thousands of indigenous crops have historically sustained communities and provided nutritious diets, many of these species have been neglected in agricultural research, policy, and investment. As a result, dietary diversity has declined, contributing to malnutrition, loss of traditional knowledge, and increased vulnerability to climate shocks.

Orphan crops—also known as indigenous, traditional, or underutilized crops—offer enormous potential for building resilient food systems. These crops are often highly nutritious, adapted to local conditions, and capable of thriving under harsh climates with minimal external inputs. Yet, despite their importance, they remain largely absent from mainstream agricultural development and food policies.

Recognizing the urgent need to diversify food systems and strengthen food sovereignty, the Consumption of Orphan Crops for Healthier Crops and Diets (CROPS4HD) – Phase II project seeks to elevate the role of orphan crops in improving nutrition, enhancing biodiversity, and strengthening climate resilience.

Supported by the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA), CROPS4HD Phase II is a four-year initiative dedicated to promoting the production, consumption, and policy recognition of orphan crops in Tanzania. The project aims to reconnect communities with nutritious indigenous foods while strengthening farmer-managed seed systems and promoting agroecological approaches to food and farming.

Building upon previous achievements, the initiative recognizes that food system transformation requires addressing not only agricultural production but also food cultures, dietary habits, seed sovereignty, and enabling policies. Through community engagement, awareness creation, advocacy, and knowledge sharing, the project seeks to ensure that indigenous crops regain their rightful place within farming systems and household diets.

In Tanzania, the project is implemented in close collaboration with SWISSAID and forms part of a broader international consortium involving partners from Chad, Niger, and India. This collaboration creates opportunities for cross-country learning, exchange of experiences, joint advocacy, and South-South cooperation on the promotion of orphan crops and resilient food systems.

Through this international partnership, the project contributes to a growing global movement that recognizes crop diversity as fundamental to addressing malnutrition, climate change, biodiversity loss, and food insecurity.

To promote the production, consumption, and recognition of orphan crops as pathways to healthier diets, food sovereignty, climate resilience, and sustainable food systems in Tanzania.

The project focuses on:

Major interventions under the project include:

The success of CROPS4HD Phase II is built on strong partnerships and collaborative action. In Tanzania, implementation is undertaken in close collaboration with SWISSAID, leveraging shared commitments to food sovereignty, agroecology, and biodiversity conservation.

The project also benefits from collaboration with consortium partners in Chad, Niger, and India, fostering South-South cooperation and enabling the exchange of experiences and innovations across different agroecological and cultural contexts. These partnerships strengthen collective advocacy efforts and contribute to building evidence and visibility for orphan crops at national, regional, and international levels.

By the end of the project, it is expected that:

CROPS4HD Phase II envisions a future where indigenous and orphan crops are no longer neglected but are recognized as strategic assets for achieving healthy diets, resilient livelihoods, and sustainable food systems.

By revitalizing traditional crops and food cultures, strengthening farmer-managed seed systems, and promoting agroecological approaches, the project contributes to food sovereignty, biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, and improved nutrition. Through collaboration with partners in Tanzania, Chad, Niger, and India, the initiative also strengthens South-South cooperation and demonstrates the power of collective action in transforming food systems for people and the planet.

Ultimately, the project seeks to ensure that crop diversity, cultural heritage, and local knowledge remain at the heart of Africa’s pathway toward resilient and equitable food systems.