Soil
degradation holds back African farmers, costing them $68 billion annually and
threatening to stall vital food production, Sir Gordon Conway, director of the
group Agriculture for Impact and a professor at Imperial College London, said
in an interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation on Thursday.
“The
problem is certainly getting worse,” Sir Gordon Conway said. “Poor farmers don’t have the money, time or
labour to prevent degradation or improve their soils,” Conway said. “If they
don’t have land tenure, there is no incentive to invest in improving their
farms.”
Climate
change, the depletion of mineral nutrients, desertification, improper use
of
fertilizer and a lack of infrastructure are compounding the problem.
An
estimated 180 million people in sub-Saharan Africa are affected by land
degradation, according to the report “No Ordinary Matter: Conserving, restoring
and enhancing Africa’s soils” launched by Conway and other experts ahead of
World Soils Day on Friday.
Urging
policymakers to commit to “zero net land degradation” the report calls for:
better monitoring of African soil conditions through remote sensing systems,
creating incentives for securing land rights for small farmers, strengthening
collaboration between soil research centres in Africa and Europe, and
increasing financial support for sustainable development.
If
African government multilateral financial institutions invest in soil
improvements, they could follow the development path of Thailand, which has
become the world’s largest rice exporter.
Financing
new irrigation systems and other infrastructure, leverged first by Thailand,
could double African food production within 10 years, Conway said.
The
average African farmer produces about 1 ton of maize per hectare of land,
compared with 2.5 tons in India and 11 tons in the U.S. corn belt, Conway said.
If
soils are better maintained in Africa, and farmers have the fertilizers and
infrastructure they need, he believes each hectare of land could eventually
produce 6 to 8 tons of maize.
Current
trends mean that once-arable lands bordering the Sahara desert are experiencing
serious wind erosion. Top soil is being blown away, while changing rain
patterns are wearing down the earth in parts of West and Southern Africa.
There
have, however, been some notable improvements, Conway said. Leveraging finance
from domestic banks, Nigeria has invested in irrigation systems, improving rice
production with the aim of being self-sufficient by 2015.
“There
are other countries where (increased) irrigation is possible: Burkina Faso,
Senegal, and Mozambique,” Conway said. “Thousands of hectares could be
irrigated with considerable potential.”
Experts
said better soil management to increase food production is vital to avert
starvation and strife in sub- Saharan Africa, where the population is expected
to surge from 896 million in 2010 to more than two billion by 2050.
Reuters
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