The
Director General, the International Fertilizer Industry Association (IFA),
Charlotte Hebebrand, has disclosed that fertilizer use in Africa remains
startlingly low compared to other regions, with average use at around 10 kg per
hectare, a tenth of the global average.
“Yet
African leaders have pledged in the 2006 Abuja Declaration to bridge this gap
and increase fertilizer use to 50 kg/ha by 2015, a goal which has only been met in very few countries.”
He
made this known at the launch of a new campaign, by the International
Fertilizer Industry Association (IFA) to promote the
importance of fertilizer
access for African farmers as a means of bridging the current agricultural
productivity gap on the continent. The campaign is being spearheaded by the
International Fertilizer Industry Association (IFA) in collaboration with the
African Fertilizer and Agribusiness Partnership (AFAP) and six other
agricultural development partner organizations.
Speaking
during the launch Wednesday at the African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF),
conference in Addis Ababa, Charlotte Hebebrand said “As the voice of the global
fertilizer industry, IFA will continue to dedicate time and resources to
raising awareness on fertilizer’s role in reducing the yield gap and driving
African agricultural development.”
The
campaign calls for six key actions to help the African continent to address
this challenge, namely: Facilitate local production and imports of fertilizers;
Provide better access to credit, finance and insurance; Invest in
infrastructure which connects farmers to input and output markets.
The
other key actions in the campaign include developing mobile technologies;
training more extension workers to work with farmers and to disseminate best
practices based on the integration of both organic and mineral nutrients and
balanced fertilization, such as the 4R Nutrient Stewardship Framework and
Integrated Soil Fertility Management (ISFM)
An
expert session at the AGRF to launch the campaign demonstrated the broad
consensus from all actors on the importance of efficient crop nutrition for
agricultural development but also for poverty eradication and broad-based
economic development.
Vanguard
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