ZINVI?, January 17, 2017 ©¤ Located some 40 kilometers from Cotonou, the Johan Est¨¨ve agro-fisheries complex in Zinvi¨¦-Zoum¨¦ in the Abomey-Calavi commune is a multipurpose farm that is innovating agricultural and fish farming practices. Eug¨¦nie Fa?zoun, the manager of the complex, is carrying out her farming activities with great enthusiasm on a long four-hectare field that slopes toward a mangrove. ¡°Here I have 3,500 egg-laying hens, a few sheep and goats, rabbits, ducks, one hectare of plantains, and a small market garden area. I also have another field with three hectares of palm for oil and plots for seasonal crops,¡± she revealed proudly.
However, in Zinvi¨¦-Zoum¨¦, Fa?zoun is especially renowned for fish farming: 21 years in the business; an investment of over CFAF 75 million for the construction of eight 24 square meter ponds, two nine square meter ponds, and one 42 square meter pond, and the installation of a feed mill and a small hatchery!
Fa?zoun used a cost-sharing subsidy amounting to CFAF 14.6 million (close to $24,000) from the World Bank-financed ) to completely overhaul her farm over the past two years. ¡°Support from PADA helped me construct five fish ponds for tilapia and catfish fingerling production, purchase a high-capacity generator, drill a borehole, and purchase genitors,¡± she noted. As a result, tilapia fingerling production has increased from 75,000 to 128,600, and catfish fingerling production from 50,000 to 75,000. Her sales have soared and Fa?zoun has reinvested a huge portion of this money in boosting fish production.
With the help of another World Bank-financed project, the , Eug¨¦nie was also able to obtain a better breeding stock to improve production quality and quantity.