This
year is dedicated by the African Union to the cause of food security and
Agriculture, so it was not surprising that a spirited gathering of more than
1,000 agriculture officials, farmers, entrepreneurs, scientists, civil society
organizations and pioneers in agribusiness representing 60 countries – met at the
headquarters of the African Union in Addis Abba, Ethiopia for four days
recently.
They
all met at the 2014 African Green Revolution Forum put together by the Alliance
for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), the African Union, the International
Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), and the Southern African
Confederation of Agricultural Unions (SACAU) are among others.
AGRF
also happened to be the first multi-stakeholder gathering in response to the
Declaration and call to Action by Heads of States and Governments during the
July 2014 AU Summit.
In
the Declaration, African Heads of State called for the
doubling of food
productivity in Africa, halving of poverty and significant progress toward the
elimination of child under-nutrition by 2025.
African
Union Chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma said these goals represent a renewed
political commitment, at the highest level, for agriculture-led growth across
our region, adding that “We need to go further, faster.”
African
Green Revolution Forum gives us the opportunity to hit the ground running and
set in motion the plans and measurable steps needed for an inclusive,
sustainable transformation of African agriculture by all actors.”
AGRF
was an opportunity for African agriculture stakeholders to discuss critical
issues for Africa’s food security: increasing food productivity as climate
change presents more challenging growing conditions; promoting agricultural
investment that generates benefits at all economic levels; increasing financing
for agricultural development; and support for modernizing commodity markets and
removing barriers to intra-regional trade.
In
his key note address, President of the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD), Kanayo F. Nwanze hit the nail on the head when he said
African nations cannot become economic powerhouse without a viable agricultural
sector.
“Many
African economies are growing strongly, but too often this is on the back of
extractive industries that do not yield jobs and income for Africa’s poor and
hungry. GDP doesn’t mean much when you are talking about indicators of personal
poverty.
“GDP
may have risen in the double -digits for many oil-exporting countries, but
paradoxically in the rural areas of the same countries people are as poor today
as they were when the first barrel of oil was pumped.
He
added “You cannot
eat
oil – at least not crude oil. You cannot eat diamonds either. You cannot eat
gold. Money from extractive industries has not transformed African agriculture
over the last 30 years. It has not fed hungry people or developed rural areas.
“I
am proud that many African nations are becoming economic powerhouses, but
without a viable agricultural sector and strong rural economy, I do not see a
viable future for Africa.”
Kanayo
said there is a moral, economic and social imperative to ensure that
agricultural growth is also sensitive to nutrition.
“Today,
around two-thirds of Africans earn their living from agriculture, livestock and
fisheries. It is time for them to benefit from the continent’s economic gains
and to contribute to its food and nutrition security.
He
said there must be a major shift in our mind-set in the way we look at farming
as “farming, particularly for smallholders, is an economic activity, a business
enterprise that feeds people and generates wealth.”
For
Chairman of Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), Strive Masiyiwa,
Africa’s smallholder farmers produce the vast majority of food grown on the
continent and they are the backbone of a sector that employs more than 65
percent of all Africans.
“So
when businesses, governments, researchers and farmers work together to
strengthen our food production and distribution systems, they are seeking
commercial success that will be shared across African society—and particularly
for the poorest among us.”
Nigeria’s
Minister for Agriculture, Dr. Adesina Akinwumi, said that African farmers need
supports just like the developed countries support their farmers with massive
subsidies in order for them to be successful.
Delivering
a paper at the high Policy Dialogue on ‘Research to Feed Africa’ during the
forum, Adesina said while there is always debate on subsidies, that his
position is that they are needed, especially in the early phases of
agricultural transformations to ensure that the poor, especially women, and
smallholders benefit from technical change.
“While
developed countries support their farmers with massive subsidies, African
farmers, who are poor, are barely supported. Lacking access to technologies and
with limited financial resources many do not take advantage of the benefits
that new technologies can offer.”
Adesina
said there is no doubt that investing in agricultural research pays, “the
challenge is always how to ensure that poor farmers benefit from technical
change.”
“What
is important is to develop ways of targeting support to reach farmers, while
ensuring that the private sector, not the government, delivers farm inputs to
farmers. This is what we did in Nigeria.”
The
Minister noted that public policies are needed to reduce adoption costs faced
by farmers, adding that when he was appointed he met a system where the
government for decades had been directly involved in procuring and distributing
fertilizers to farmers.
“The
system was corrupt and benefited rent seekers, not smallholder farmers.
We
ended four decades of fertilizer sector corruption within 90 days and with it
the era of government buying and distributing seeds, and replaced it with a
private sector-driven system.”
He
said with that the role of government shifted to providing targeted farm
support to farmers for seeds and fertilizers via electronic coupons on mobile
phones or “e-wallets”.
“Between
2012 and 2014, a total of 14 million farmers received their subsidized farm
inputs using electronic vouchers on their mobile phones to directly pay private
sector input retailers.
“Dignity
was returned to farmers. As farmers expressed their demand, the number of seed
companies increased from 5 to 80 within three years.”
With
the development, the Minister noted, the financial markets took note and for
the first time ever banks began to lend to seed companies and agro dealers in
Nigeria.
“Bank
lending to seed companies and agro dealers rose from $10 million in 2012 to $53
million by 2013, while bank lending to fertilizer companies rose from $100
million in 2012 to $500 million in 2013.
“Private
sector input supply companies began to build their supply chains to reach
farmers directly instead of supplying to the government, stimulating economic
activity and creating jobs all across the seed and fertilizer sector value
chains.
Jean
Lebel, International Development Research Centre (IDRC)’s President, said they
have seen dramatic progress in local farmers’ livelihoods through CIFSRF
projects that have improved the yield of vegetable crops, introduced secondary
harvest, and developed breakthrough vaccines for cattle that hold out the
promise of improving the GDP in some African countries.
“These
advances not only benefit farmers today but will improve African food security
in the future.”
Vanguard
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