Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts

Friday, 14 November 2014

Agri’s flat growth threatens poverty

The flat growth of agriculture sector for the first nine months of the year is not expected  to affect the gross domestic product (GDP) for this year.
National Economic and Development Authority  Director General Arsenio Balisacan said at the sidelines of 52nd Annual Meeting of the Philippine Economic Society in Makati City that despite the less than 1 percent growth of the agriculture sector from January to September period, it may not slow down the economic growth of the country as the sector accounts for only 11 percent of the total GDP.
The Philippine Statistics Authority  reported yesterday  that the agriculture sector only grew by 0.33 percent in the first nine months of the year even as the sector was affected by three strong typhoons such as “Glenda”, “Luis”, and “Mario” in July to September.
On the other hand, the sector’s value of production grossed P1.1 trillion at current prices in the said period, higher by 9.55 percent than last year’s gross earnings.
“Even though the growth of agriculture is likely to have impact on GDP, but because of its portion (in the economy), we hope it will not affect,” Balisacan said.
The NEDA chief, however, noted that despite agriculture sector’s low contribution to the GDP, it is a part of the economy which has large impact in poverty reduction since there is large portion of the population who are dependent in agriculture.
“If the agriculture output is low then the income is also low,” he explained noting that individual income of the population in the said sector will further decline when there is higher population dependent in the sector.
PSA data also showed that the farmers and fishermen are the poorest sectors in the country in 2012.
Poverty rate among fishermen was at 39.2 percent while farmers at 38.3 percent.*PNA

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Africa: Supporting Women in Agriculture for a 'Prosperous' Africa

BY SAMANTHA NKIROTE MCKENZIE

The African Union (AU) is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, but instead of looking back, the current chair, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, seems intent on casting her vision ahead to an Africa 50 years from now. Her hope is that it will be "a prosperous Africa at peace with itself".

Dlamini-Zuma admits that this will not be easy, and she sees human and agricultural development as critical to the realisation of the Africa she envisions. "Agriculture is very central not only in providing nutrition, food and food security but also in stimulating industrialisation," said Dlamini-Zuma, speaking last week at the bi-annual Gender is My Agenda Campaign (GIMAC) meeting.

Calling on the support of the 55 civil society organisations that make up the GIMAC network, she said, "The AU can only coordinate, facilitate and advocate but the actual work, in the end, has to be done at the national level by yourselves."

The unique and powerful role GIMAC can play was echoed by Frannie Léautier, the executive secretary of the African Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF). Léautier said GIMAC's connections at the grassroots level and its ability to "break doors in the halls of power whether it is at the pan-African, country, chamber of commerce or ministry level" allows for "holistic vertical and horizontal change".

In Africa, women play a vital role in agriculture and nutrition, but they face significant challenges. Léautier believes there are three key rights the GIMAC network needs to address if it aims to transform the role women play in agriculture: land rights; the right to conduct of cross-border trade without harassment; and the right to own businesses and conduct business across borders.

Another challenge that African women face in the agriculture sector is climate change. Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland who leads the Mary Robinson Foundation-Climate Justice has brought to GIMAC her passion to raise awareness about what she says is the injustice of how climate change is undermining livelihoods, particularly in developing countries. Bineta Diop, the founder of GIMAC, affectionately refers to Robinson as her "African sister".

Speaking to reporters after the GIMAC meeting, Robinson said she was impressed by how the women of GIMAC had adopted climate justice as part of their core agenda, and she applauded their focus on the role of women in agriculture because, she said, "food and nutrition is at the heart of development."

Last July GIMAC, in partnership with ACBF and under the patronage of Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, launched an initiative to empower women in agriculture. In its first phase, the initiative is carrying out a baseline study to determine what work is being done regarding women and agriculture. This will then determine what key areas the initiative will focus on.
Original Article Here

Saturday, 26 January 2013

Nigeria: Health and Agriculture Key, Says Kwara Governor Saraki

Ilorin — This interview was first done in 2009, when an AllAfrica team visited a rural health clinic and a farm in Kwara state and afterwards talked to then-GovernorBukola Saraki about rural development. We are revisiting that conversation now, because AllAfrica is exploring those issues in Nigeria in more depth this month and in the months to come. What the governor – now a senator from Kwara state – said then can help to benchmark how far Nigeria has come in the past three years and how far it still has to go. Excerpts:

You're a medical doctor who has become a politician. Has your professional background had an influence on what you do as governor?

We have the first state health insurance scheme in Nigeria. The design came partly from my medical background but more from experience, after being governor.

It is always easy for us to look at things like bricks and mortars and say, "I've built a hospital." People will come, there will be fanfare, and we cut tapes. As politicians and as leaders, we clap and say, "Oh, yes, we've done something." Everybody can point and say, "That building was commissioned by Governor Saraki". Building those clinics and hospitals, people can say we've sorted health care. And that's a mistake. But you only learn that from being here in this seat for a while.

We came in saying: we need more hospitals, we need more clinics, we need more drugs – and we do. But there is one thing I have learnt after being here for a while, which many people don't understand. Over years of neglect, the population has lost faith in medicine, in the sense that over the years the clinics are not there, the doctors are not there. They've gone to traditional medicine and other ways of trying to survive. So you first have to win their confidence and get them to come back.

The way to get them to come back is pretty much as if you are a marketing a new product. We decided to charge a nominal amount for insurance – 300 Naira ($U.S. 2) a year. So that's basically free. It's not a cost issue anymore. And we are providing care through clinics. After a year in the program, the community has started going back to those clinics, and as time goes on, they begin to act like consumers and demand better service - because they're paying for insurance. And that begins to bring back better health care.
Original Article Here

Friday, 25 January 2013

Agriculture 'still the best bet' in cutting African poverty levels

Despite the increased focus on new areas such as technology that are fuelling Africa's rapid growth, agriculture remains the best bet to pull millions out of poverty, a new report has found.
Africa's growth needs would be better served by focusing on food staples, the International Food Policy Research Institute says.
The report is based on case studies of 10 African countries that sought to determine how agriculture could better contribute to poverty reduction and improved food security.
The study found that agriculture-led growth has the greatest impact on reducing absolute poverty, especially in sub-Saharan Africa where the majority are farmers.
The Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) puts the number of those directly involved in agriculture on the continent at 61 per cent.
Given that most of these are subsistence farmers, encouraging the growing of staple crops such maize, bananas and rice could go a long way in eliminating poverty, it said.
According to the institute, while export crops such as coffee and tea may have higher value than food crops and other staples such as livestock products, they do generate economic growth as effectively.
Tanzania’s livestock sector for example contributes around 12 per cent to the country’s Gross Domestic Product. The vast majority of the livestock, about 99 per cent, belongs to small owners, with a full third of the poor owning livestock.
In contrast, big farms and ranches in the country constitute only around one per cent of total livestock ownership, according to FAO data. Focusing on Tanzania’s livestock sector would therefore contribute greatly to reducing the country’s poverty levels, while at the same time stimulating sustainable economic growth, the study noted.
More cost effective
The same can be said of Mozambique’s roots and all staple foods in Zambia and Nigeria. According to the report, in Rwanda, growth driven by maize or pulses is 30-60 per cent more effective at reducing poverty than growth driven by export crops.
There is also good news for Africa’s agricultural policy makers. Investment in staples may be more cost effective in driving growth when compared to investment in non-agricultural sectors.
When quantified, returns achieved from non-agricultural growth (weighed in contribution to total GDP) would have to be significantly higher than those from agricultural growth in order to have better effectiveness at poverty reduction.
African nations should thus look into investing public resources in those agricultural sub-sectors with strong linkages to the poor, and to the overall economy.
Further examples are adduced: in Africa, 40 per cent of all root and tuber crops are produced by Nigeria, which is also the largest cassava producer in the world, with nearly 90 per cent of its production being for domestic consumption.
Cassava farming therefore plays a huge role in the lives of the country's mostly poor farmers and in the overall economy. As such, promoting growth in the root and tuber sub-sector could go a longer way in providing long term solutions to rural poverty.
Despite underscoring the importance of agricultural growth in eliminating poverty in Africa, the report also notes that increased growth in other non-agricultural sectors is necessary for faster urban development.
Original Article Here

Saturday, 19 January 2013

Nigeria: Mobile Phones Have Reduced Corruption in Agriculture - Minister

The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina today disclosed that mobile telephones have been used to effectively tackle corruption in the agricultural sector of the country.

According to a release signed by Director of Information in the ministry, Salisu Na'inna Danbatta, the minister said while receiving the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Mr. Rajiv Shah during a courtesy call in Abuja on Thursday that, "deploying the mobile phone to deliver agro-inputs to farmers through the e-Wallet has ended 40 years of corruption in the procurement and distribution of fertilisers by the Federal Government."

"Dr. Adesina explained further that the mobile phone has boosted the productivity of small-holder farmers in the country by delivering improved seeds and much-needed fertilisers to them and contributed in the economic revival of rural areas," the statement further said.

Other claims contained in the release were that "..The e-Wallet is working and the mobile phone is the most powerful tool in fighting corruption in the agricultural sector" ...and that "...due to the implementation of the Growth Enhancement Support scheme through which 1.2 million small-holder farmers accessed government-subsidised fertilisers and free improved seeds, an estimated 8.1 million metric tonnes of food was added to the national harvest in 2012."

5 million farmers will be registered to benefit from the GES scheme in 2013 as part of the Federal Government's effort to add 5 million metric tons of food every year, the minister told his guests.

Proof that the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) was working could be seen in the US$8 billion foreign investments which flowed into the sector in 2012 alone, Dr. Akinwumi said.

"In his remarks, Mr. Rajiv Khan commended the Minister for his dynamic leadership and attributed the success so far achieved in transforming the sector to his commitment," the statement added.
Original Article Here

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Nigeria: Director Wants Strategic Interventions in Agriculture

Mrs Karima Babangida, the Deputy Director (Gender and Youth), Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, said that strategic interventions could attract youth to agriculture.

She said this in Abuja on Tuesday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

Babangida said that given the aging population and steady rural-urban migration, there was an urgent need to fund and re-brand the sector.

The Deputy Director, who rued the nature of agricultural practice in the country, noted that this had constituted a great disincentive to youth participation in agriculture.

According to her, government at all levels should encourage the involvement of young people in the agriculture sector.

She said that efforts should be made by governments and other stakeholders to provide necessary agricultural inputs such as extension services, land and credit in order to encourage the youth.

She advised that agricultural science should be incorporated at all levels of educational system in the country.

Babangida also suggested that there should be strong partnership between the government and the private sector, saying that the partnership could woo the youths to agriculture.

"Training for youth on agricultural techniques and processes can be handled by these private sectors.

"And the private sector can also help in the provision of finance and modern agricultural implements for the use of young farmers," she said.

Babangida noted that these could encourage the youths to go into fields of research in the agriculture sector.

NAN
Original Article Here

Friday, 11 January 2013

Liberia: Suspend Agriculture Minister

BY JIMMEY C. FAHNGON
The Special Independent Investigating Body (SIIB) set up by President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf to investigate the issuance of Private Use Permits (PUPs) in the forest sector has recommended one month suspension of Agriculture Minister, Dr. Florence Chenoweth.

Addressing a news conference Monday to officially release the report, the head of SIIB, Mr. Dorbor Jallah said Dr. Chenoweth's suspension is due to her failure to provide proper oversight of the Forestry Development Authority (FDA) as well as her failure to conduct due diligence in the issuance of Private Use Permits.

The committee also recommends that the Board of Directors be appropriately reprimanded for breach of their duty and also failure to conduct due diligence and provide effective control over the operations of FDA in the issuance of PUP.

In the report, the Committee recommended that the suspended FDA Managing Director, Moses Wogbeh, be dismissed for gross misconduct, abuse of power, economic sabotage and insubordination to the FDA's Board and prosecuted appropriately.

The committee also called for the dismissal of FDA's Technical Manager, GIS Coordinator and Commercial Manager, Messrs John Kantor, Towon Nyenty and Jangar Kamara for orchestrating the falsification of government records and receiving illegal payments from PUP's operators.

The committee further recommends that the three individuals be investigated by the Ministry of Justice and Liberia Anti-Corruption Committee (LACC) and if found culpable, they should be made to restitute payments received illegally.

It also recommended the dismissal of Mr. Maxwell C.F. Gwee, Director of Cartography Service at the Ministry of Lands, Mines and Energy.

The Committee further recommended that Atlantic Resources Limited be mandated to pay all tax arrears and bar from engaging in commercial forestry activities for violating the National Forestry Reform Law (NFRL).

The Committee wants affiliate companies of Atlantic Resources Limited to be barred permanently from engaging in commercial forestry activities.

The committee, among other things, also recommended that EJ and J Corporation and its Chief Executive Officer Eliza Kronyann be prevented from engaging in commercial forest activities unless an independent panel makes determination that the company has the financial and technical capacity to operate a commercial forestry license.

Original Article Here



Saturday, 5 January 2013

Marine agriculture offers a new solution to the problem of water scarcity

Ricardo Radulovich, professor of water science at the University of Costa Rica, points out that in Africa irrigation is a very limited option, due to lack of water, and rain-fed agriculture is affected by prolonged dry seasons and rainfall variability during the rainy seasons. A case in point is the Sahel in west Africa, where drought has grown increasingly frequent and where emergency aid was needed last year to forestall famine.



Yet Radulovich believes that Africa's lakes can be part of the solution to the continent's agricultural limitations. Several African countries are endowed with lakes, some very large, that occupy a surface of more than 150,000 square kilometres. Why not use that water surface to grow food and aquatic plants, and for fisheries, asks Radulovich, who began his career as an agricultural water scientist 10 years ago.



"The key issue is water," Radulovich said in a telephone interview from Costa Rica. "We have land, but water is the limiting element. You can have agriculture if you have water. If we use that lake surface to produce crops, aquatic plants, we won't waste water."



Radulovich and his team, including Schery Umanzor, have already begun prototype projects on Lake Nicaragua, where they have grown lettuce, tomato, cucumber and cantaloupe melons on floating rafts, a continuation of trials that were undertaken at sea in 2001 at the Gulf of Nicoya, on the Pacific coast. The tomato roots can trail in the water or be potted with a cotton rope dangling in the water from the pot, which draws in water to the plant.



The size of the rafts can vary, going up to six square metres, and can be made simply and cheaply, from plastic bottles, for example. Where the water is polluted by horticulture, an option is to grow flowers. One advantage of growing crops on water is that they are not as vulnerable to insects as they would be on land.



The team's pioneering techniques have earned them a $100,000 (£62,000) grant from Grand Challenges Canada, which is funded by the Canadian government. Targeting innovations for developing countries, Grand Challenges Canada will provide additional funding of $1m for those ideas that prove effective.



Radulovich and his colleagues also see potential in aquatic plants such as azolla, water hyacinth and alligator weed. Frequently dismissed as weeds that clutter waterways, such plants are seen by Radulovich as enriching biodiversity, and as a source of nutrients and habitat for small fish and snails that attract bigger fish. He believes that hyacinth, for example, can be used as feed for herbivorous fish such as Chinese carp, animals and even humans, in the form of flour.



"Currently, where their blooms are a nuisance and clutter waterways, the new trend is to harvest and use them," Radulovich says. "The next trend must be: cultivate them. All of this without even beginning selection and genetic improvement programmes, which in a few years, with a fraction of what is spent in agricultural improvement, can lead to tremendous advances."



Radulovich is particularly excited at the possibility of growing rice by attaching rice plants to ropes. "Even if the water is low in oxygen, maybe you can produce three rice crops a year, but whether we can do it economically I don't know," he says.



Several countries have expressed interest in the concept of marine agriculture, including Uganda, Ethiopia, the Philippines and Malawi. But Radulovich sees the technological problems as only the start of the challenge, with cultural change, including food habits, posing greater hurdles.



"If people need it, and they do, the water environment must be used intelligently, and even changed, to an extent, without biological or environmental chaos."
Original Article Here

Sunday, 30 December 2012

Africa: Agriculture Gets Increased U.S. Support in 2012

BY KATHRYN MCCONNELL

Washington — During 2012, the United States bolstered its commitment to agriculture and economic growth around the world with new systems that monitor the effectiveness of assistance efforts, new agreements with public and private sector partners and more resources for agricultural research.

The United States also integrated its short-term humanitarian assistance with its longer-term development aid with the aim of building resilience in communities vulnerable to recurrent crises.

Progress began early in the year. In February, the U.S. Feed the Future program, the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute and the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative of Oxford University launched a Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index.

The index is the first tool to measure how much women are included in agriculture production, control how family income is used and are leaders in their communities. It is used to evaluate how Feed the Future programs support women's role in reducing hunger and advancing prosperity.

President Obama established Feed the Future in 2009 following a pledge by leaders of the Group of Eight (G8) industrialized nations to invest more in country-driven efforts to form long-term solutions to chronic food insecurity and malnutrition.

February also saw the introduction of a system to record how U.S. agencies perform against key Feed the Future indicators, the first time multiple agencies have reported to a common food-security monitoring system. In October, Feed the Future released its evaluations of information captured from May 2009 through May 2012 and concluded: "By improving the way we do development, Feed the Future is already making a difference." The system helps planners make decisions about future programming and spending.

On the eve of the 2012 G8 Summit in May, President Obama announced that the group's leaders, African leaders and leaders of nearly 50 companies agreed to commit new resources to a New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition to lift 50 million people out of poverty by 2022 through inclusive and sustained agricultural growth. The private sector partners promised collectively to invest $3 billion in Africa's agriculture sector, while African leaders promised to adopt policies to improve investment opportunities and to drive their countries' food-security plans.
Original Article Here

Thursday, 27 December 2012

Eritrea: Reliable Infrastructure Facilities Laid for Agriculture Sector - Ministry

Asmara — The Ministry of Agriculture stated that the past 20 years were crucial as reliable infrastructure facilities had been laid in them for sustainable development of the agricultural sector. It made the statement in elaboration of a paper presented regarding the sector at the Second National Investment Conference.

Mr. Solomon Haile, Director of planning and statistics in the Ministry, explained that construction and establishment of water reservoirs, training centers, laboratories, nurseries, Gene Bank, hatchery and apicultural lab, as well as purchase of various machineries are among the accomplishments registered to this end. He further indicated that more areas of the country's land have been put under cultivation through irrigation techniques and rain-fed farming vis-à-vis the endeavors being exerted to raise the number of livestock.

Pointing out that major achievements have been made in promoting crop production, animal husbandry and processing of agricultural products, Mr. Solomon called on nationals to become beneficiaries of the sizable opportunities in this regard. Moreover, he disclosed that the Ministry has mapped out short and long-term plans with a view to supplementing the national economy and ventures towards ensuring food security through enhancing labor system, fostering production for export and local consumption, as well as creating job opportunities, among others.
Original Article Here

The roots of agriculture began in crop production

By: DR. MIKE ROSMANN

Most archeological and genetic evidence indicates the history of agriculture extends back 13,000-15,000 years. In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, Guns, Germs and Steel, Jared Diamond declares that the earliest deliberate cultivation of crops occurred on the plains that intersect the Zagros Mountains of modern-day Iran, Turkey and Iraq. Though dryer today, this was the Fertile Crescent of southwest Asia.

What factors led humans to practice agriculture? The answer is not as simple as “Food is needed to survive.” This and next issue’s column indicate how and why people began to raise crops and livestock.


Accumulated knowledge from several disciplines, chiefly anthropology, archeology and paleontology, suggests our earliest ancestors were highly territorial hunter-gatherers in Africa who scavenged plants and their seeds or fruits, tubers, insects, birds, eggs, fish, and the meat, bones and skins of small animals and the carcasses of larger animals, usually slain by more powerful predators.

As the clans outgrew the carrying capacity of their African territories, successive waves of early humans, such as Neanderthals, migrated into Europe and Asia in search of favorable sources of essentials for their survival – chiefly foods, garments and shelter. Life remained uncertain for these aboriginals, as the plants and animals on which they subsisted varied in their availability.

The most recent wave of our progenitors also migrated out of Africa, about 50,000 years ago. What is considered modern man brought greater capacities with them than preceding humans. Their brains were larger; their language and observation skills were more refined. They probably knew something about refining metals, which greatly improved tool-making.

These modern humans found ample plants and animals in the fertile regions of southwest Asia where the terrain was warming after the most recent glacial period. Receding ice across Europe and Asia, and in North America as well, followed by numerous cycles of healthy grasses and manure from grazing animals, resulted in rich loam soils available for tilling and growing selected crops.

The keen observation skills of modern humans enabled them to select seeds from available grasses in the Fertile Crescent, such as wheat and barley, and from indigenous legumes, such as lentils and other pulses. They began to collect and store the tastiest seeds with the most nutritional value.

Some seeds inadvertently fell into the soil around the living quarters of human groups and sprang into the plants they desired. Learning to tuck seeds into moist ground, to scrape away competing plants and to select the most usable and nutritious seeds from among those they grew, benefited the community.

This was the beginning of agriculture. As described in next issue’s column, raising livestock followed crop production. Most importantly, domesticating animals and cultivating land to produce food, clothing and shelter allowed modern man to survive lean times, such as winter and droughts, and to proliferate faster than hunter-gatherers.

Researchers of our origins suggest the emergence of agriculture enabled people within their agrarian communities to specialize in various tasks. Some became tool-makers, perhaps capitalizing on information passed along by central African ancestors about how to smelt metals.

Others specialized in acquiring knowledge about medicinal plants and healing rituals, thus becoming the first medical and behavioral healthcare providers. Some specialized in building, to become the first construction engineers. Others became the village artists and musicians. Still others became the leaders of religious practices, government and so forth.

Development of modern culture was facilitated by people not having to spend most of their time securing adequate food, clothing and shelter. The systematic observation methods of early agriculturists were the basis of the scientific method.

The need to count and calculate sufficient food, as well as to construct buildings, inspired the development of a numeral system and mathematics. The need to record information contributed to the invention of written language.

In order to keep clans from killing each other off, governments and judicial proceedings were devised to settle territorial disputes.

As agricultural communities proliferated in southwest Asia, some members had to secure additional territories to raise crops and livestock. Over successive generations they migrated into Europe, Asia, Australia and some crossed the still-ice-covered Bering Strait to settle into the western hemisphere.

There is some evidence which suggests agriculture and human societies developed independently in eastern Asia and the Americas, but perhaps these migrants brought remnant knowledge of agricultural methods with them.

As David Montgomery argues in his 2007 book, Dirt: The Erosion of Civilization, how we behave today is greatly due to agriculture. He also warns if we aren’t good stewards of our lives and environments, we could contribute to our demise.

In addition to the aforementioned books by Jared Diamond and David Montgomery, I am indebted to other popular and scholarly books and articles – too numerous to list here – for the information in this article. I have posted a bibliography on my website.
Original Article Here

Tuesday, 25 December 2012

Rwanda: Agriculture, Infrastructure-Development Programme On Priority

Gakenke district workers have emphasized that the district's five year development plan will be focused on developing agriculture and infrastructure programmes which might be a developmental lift in the area.

This was resolved on December 18th 2012 during the meeting of the district officials and development partners to share ideas on District Development Plan (DDP).

During the meeting, the officials confirmed that education sector is improved and village settlement coverage is 71percent.

However, infrastructures such as electricity and roads in addition agriculture are a stumbling block to the development of the district.

It was agreed that 13 roads should be constructed and 20 roads to be renovated, so that residents get access to the markets and sell their produce.

On the issue of electricity, they plan to raise the number of people with electricity from 5-6 percent to 70 percent in the year 2018.

On agriculture, lands will be consolidated and productivity will be increased through the use of composite and factory made manure, so that 30.8 percent of residents are uplifted from under the poverty line.

In addition, four modern markets will be built and health centres will be renovated for better services.

The district administration in partnership with private sector plans to set up two maize factories and to make Kabuye hill a tourist destination dubbed "Roadside station."
Original Article Here

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Discovery of Africa Moth Species Important for Agriculture, Controlling Invasive Plants

In the rain forests of the Congo, where mammals and birds are hunted to near-extinction, an impenetrable sound of buzzing insects blankets the atmosphere.

Because it is a fairly inaccessible region with political unrest, much of the Congo's insect biodiversity remains largely undiscovered. In a new monographic book published this week in Zootaxa, researchers at the University of Florida and the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Belgium provide insect biodiversity information for this area in Central Africa that increasingly undergoes habitat destruction.

Focusing on a group of leaf-mining moths, researchers name 41 new species, nearly doubling the number previously known from the region. Leaf miners occur worldwide and the biodiversity research is important because some species are agricultural pests, while others help control unwanted invasive plant species. Some are also known to delay plant aging.

"When we began this project, we had no idea how many species would be out there," said co-author Akito Kawahara, assistant curator of Lepidoptera at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus. "In a two-week field trip, we discovered nearly 50 potentially new species, which is really surprising. There is still an enormous amount of life out there that we know very little of."

Lead author Jurate DePrins has been working on leaf miners in the Congo for nearly 10 years and was joined by Kawahara about five years ago. As the name suggests, the small moths burrow within leaves as larvae, making them particularly difficult to find. Adult moths measure only about 2 to 5 millimeters in length, but they can be extraordinarily beautiful with colorful markings and metallic scales, Kawahara said.

"The caterpillars are completely flat so they can live inside the thin leaf," Kawahara said. "If you think of a regular caterpillar and then you squished it and shrunk it, that's what they look like."

After collecting caterpillars in the wild, researchers raise the larvae to adulthood on-site, a process that takes less than a week for some species.

"It's so hard to tell what's actually happening because they're so small and they get overlooked, but if you look at what is happening inside a leaf under a microscope, it's just an incredible world," Kawahara said. "You'll see a tiny wasp larva living within a caterpillar, and another, even smaller wasp larva living inside that larger wasp larva that is inside the moth larva. It really opens your eyes to this incredible, unknown world and makes you think, 'What is going on here?' It's truly amazing."

Leaf-mining moths have unusual survival strategies, poorly understood by researchers, Kawahara said. Relatives of the new species are known to make "green islands," patches of green leaves found in a pile of brown leaves. When leaves fall from trees and turn brown, the caterpillars preserve the leaves they live in and keep them green.

"Some of these caterpillars actually have the ability to control plant tissue and prevent aging in the plant," Kawahara said. "Now we're trying to actually understand the mechanism behind how they actually do it."

Lithocolletinae, the group that the authors focused on, is one of the oldest-known subfamilies in Lepidoptera, first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758. The only book describing its species in Africa was published in 1961.

"This is really one of the first major revisions on species level of any of the African members of this large family," said Donald Davis, a research entomologist at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. "Any of their discoveries is going to be important because it greatly increases what we previously knew, how little we knew."

While many large organisms are being studied, not many researchers focus on the smaller organisms, Davis said. Information about Lithocolletinae is needed to understand which species may be agricultural pests or used to control invasive plants.

"It's an unknown fauna and so they've made a major step to start telling us something about this biota," Davis said. "Because the moths are herbivores, they have both beneficial and detrimental benefits. It's one of the things we get a lot of questions about."
Original article Here

Friday, 30 November 2012

Africa: Charting the History of Agriculture and Climate Change

A new info graphic that maps the progress of the agricultural sector in addressing climate change throughout the history of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations has been launched on the sidelines of this year's climate summit in Doha.

Launched ahead of Agriculture, Landscapes and Livelihoods Day 5 on December 3, The Story of Agriculture and Climate Change: The Road We've Travelled highlights significant events in the international calendar, such as the adoption of the Kyoto Protocol in 1997, the initiation of REDD in 2005 and the first ever Agriculture and Rural Development Day in 2009.

"Agriculture is already being hard hit by climate change and the outlook is even worse. However there are many options for adaptation, and some of these even bring mitigation co-benefits," said Bruce Campbell, Director of the CGIAR Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security research program.

Agriculture supports over 1 million of the world's rural poor, yet is responsible for 80% of overall deforestation and an estimated 31 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions. Increasing agricultural yields and improving farming techniques are just some the way that the sector could help reduce its overall contribution to climate change.

As such negotiators at COP18 in Doha must "support the unique role of agriculture in the global climate change response", argues Tracy Gerstle, co-Chair of Farming First.

The infographic features a call-to-action from 19 of the world's leading agricultural organisations, calling for the creation of a Work Programme on Agriculture under the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technology Advice (SBSTA) - a scientific advisory group to the UNFCCC.

It is hoped that a new SBSTA work programme would document and share knowledge of improved agricultural practices to inform decision-making around agriculture and climate change to the UNFCCC's Conference of the Parties as they prepare national strategies to address climate change.

"Now is the time to act. Farmers around the world are experiencing the impacts of climate change today and they need support if they are to adapt. Farming can also become part of the solution, given the potential of agriculture to mitigation," added Gerstle.

The infographic was created by Farming First, a coalition of farmers associations, engineers and scientists, in partnership with the CGIAR Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security research program (CCAFS) and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT).
Original Article Here

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Mozambique: Taxation in the Agricultural Sector

BY EVA MEIGNEN
Maputo — On November 27, the CTA organized a seminar followed by a discussion on the preliminary results of the study entitled "Taxation in the agricultural sector in Mozambique", funded by USAID / SPEED.

The study, made by Jo Beth Mertens and presented by the economic adviser of the CTA, Hipolito Hamela, presents taxation in agriculture with an emphasis on exit tax of 20%, the absence of documents, such as invoices and receipts issued by the peasants for tax purposes, the existence of numerous peasants without Individual Number of Tax Registration (NUIT) that are outside the tax system.

According to the study, the requirement of "documented expenses" for tax purposes and the exit tax are the two major problems that negatively affect the agricultural sector. Several recommendations were made, including:
Do not require registration to the regime of Simplified Tax for Small Taxpayer (ISPC) from producers having a turnover of less than 36 monthly minimum wages, highest minimum wage as at 31 December of the year preceding that to which the activity refers.
The elimination of the simplified VAT system, rendered useless by the existence of the ISPC, because in reality, ISPC replaces the simplified VAT system.
Changing the VAT Act with a clear indication of the products that are exempt and those that apply a zero tax rate.

The representative of the Tax Authority noted that it was important not to encourage measures to promote non-tax registration and noted that 24,000 "disseminators" had been trained and certified by the Tax Authority to disseminate tax information in the districts.

Questions have been raised about Law of Freight Transport, which requires among other things that the carrier, buyer and seller of goods hold a NUIT; VAT and the application of high customs tariffs on imported goods of prime necessity in the agricultural value chain, such as milk substitutes and food for animals, prevent Mozambican agriculture to be competitive.

In conclusion, it was emphasized that these fiscal problems were not limited to agriculture but involved different sectors of the economy.
Original Article Here

Africa: Europe Signs Pact to Protect Traditional African Agriculture Products

BY MASAHUDU ANKIILU

The European Commission has signed a co-operation agreement with the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization (ARIPO) to improve the protection of traditional agricultural products (geographical indications -GIs) in Africa.

This will involve, among other matters, promoting the GI legal framework, informing producers and other stakeholders and enhancing the public's awareness of GIs and their potential for African producers.

The following names have been proposed as candidate for GI protection in joint work carried out by the EU and the African Union. These include: Ghana Fine Flavour Cocoa, Shama shea butter from Ghana, Rooibos and Karoo lamb, both from South Africa and Rift Valley Coffee from Tanzania.

Dacian CioloÅŸ, Commissioner for Agriculture and Rural Development, said "This cooperation will result in better protection for farmers' traditional and indigenous products across Africa. This is an important initiative, which will help secure the interests of African farmers."

He added, "I urge officials on both sides to work together and with stakeholders to make the geographical indications programme a reality in 2013. This will make a strong contribution to the FAO's International Year of Family Farming in 2014."

Speaking at the opening plenary of the 36th session of ARIPO's Administrative Council in Zanzibar, Tanzania, where the agreement was signed, Dr Gift Sibanda, ARIPO's Director General, declared "I am delighted with this agreement.

We took a strategic decision last year to develop geographical indication protection. Through this cooperation with the Commission, we hope to build a system of effective GI protection, suited to African farmers' needs."

Instructively, the (non-legally binding) agreement is an administrative memorandum of understanding in which the Commission's agricultural department and ARIPO undertake to work together in development of GIs.

The EU has developed over time a comprehensive scheme of protection of geographical indications, which encourages diverse agricultural production, protects product names from misuse and imitation and helps consumers with information on specific characteristics of products.

In December 2011 the ARIPO Council adopted a decision to develop a system for protection of geographical indications. The Commission has worked with ARIPO through regional seminars to promote the use of intellectual property rights in inter-regional and international trade.

The present memorandum of understanding will formalise this cooperation in respect of geographical indications.

ARIPO is based in Harare, Zimbabwe, and brings together 18 member countries (Botswana, the Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Rwanda, Somalia, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe) and 12 observers.
Original Article Here

Organic agriculture is the key to 2012 worldwide failing agricultural yields

Organic Agriculture may just hold the key to these problems. It is one of the best practices that ensure environmental sustainability by sustaining soil fertility, ecosystems and the health of people. It relies on locally adapted improved ecological processes and cycles as well as natural biodiversity rather than the use of synthetic inputs and genetically modified materials.

Published studies show that organic farming systems are more resilient to predicted weather extremes and can produce higher yields than conventional farming systems (Drinkwater, Wagoner and Sarrantonio 1998; Welsh, 1999; Pimentel, 2005).

The International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) is currently advocating the adoption of organic agriculture worldwide.

World-wide local governments need to promote such agricultural practices that boost local agricultural yields, thereby helping alleviate failing crop yields. In Africa, countries like Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Uganda; currently suffer from extreme droughts, floods and invasion of migratory pests that affect crops.

Organic agriculture can be the solution. Let’s think sustainability for future generations!
Original Article Here

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Cameroon: The Nation to Tap from Korea's Agricultural Experience

The Republic of Korea represented by the Korean Ambassador to Cameroon, Cho June- Hyuck has expressed Korean's willingness to contribute to the reinforcement of Cameroon's agricultural competitiveness and job creation while attracting Korean agro-allied enterprises into its markets and the Sub-regional markets in a win-win partnership.

After laying the foundation stone of the Mechanised Complex Development Project for irrigated rice cultivation in the Centre Region, the Ambassador has launch yet another first Cameroon/Korea Agriculture Cooperation workshop which marks a significant take-off for Cameroon and Korea to cooperate more efficiently and on long-term basis in the agricultural sector. During the workshop, both countries presented views about their potentials in the agricultural sector, deviced strategies for better handling of projects and identified next projects to be realised after the Mechanised Complex Development Project for irrigated rice cultivation.

The Korean Republic that is more experienced in agriculture has promised to continue to contribute to the success of the cooperation's projects in the domain of agriculture by carrying out technology transfer to support the new second-generation agriculture championed by the Head of State. The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Essimi Menye said Korea has developed rapidly based on agricultural produce and Cameroon will follow Korean's technical approach. "Given that they are more experienced than we are, the workshop will help Cameroon to discover Korean know-how especially as they have brought experts and researchers to teach Cameroon what they did to grow so fast," the Minister said.

The workshop comprised four presentations among others,the development strategies for rural sector and development strategies of rice cultivation in Cameroon and the rural development model and the role of the Korea Rural Community Corporation (KRC) in Korea
Original Article Here

Tuesday, 13 November 2012

Program to improve Africa's agriculture

By Jin Zhu (chinadaily.com.cn)

A four-year program jointly launched by the UK and China will start this year to help African countries to improve their agricultural production capacity in a major effort to eliminate hunger.

With a UK investment of 10 million ($15.9 million) and the Chinese contribution of expertise, the program will facilitate the transfer of agricultural technology to low-income countries in Africa and Asia. Pilot projects will be first established in Malawi and Uganda.

Thanks to the input of advanced technology and supportive policies, China's grain output realized a ninth consecutive year of growth since 2004, Niu Dun, vice-minister of agriculture said at the second Africa-Britain-China Conference on Agriculture and Fisheries in Beijing on Monday.

"In addition to realizing self-sufficiency in grain, China has helped other developing countries, especially in Africa, to improve agricultural productivity and food security in recent decades," he said.

Since the 1950s, China has dispatched nearly 10,000 agricultural technicians to Africa and built more than 240 agricultural projects in African countries, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

"Further cooperation with African countries, such as in the freshwater fishery and deep processing of agricultural product industries, will be strengthened in future," Niu said.

African participants also called for more technology and knowledge transfers to help the countries in term of the sustainable development of agriculture.

For instance, annual fish production in Malawi now is estimated at 90,000 metric tonnes mainly from natural sources while annual aquaculture production is only 3,600 tonnes, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security of Malawi.

"Great challenges, including the lack of appropriate improved technology in aquaculture and poor fish feed formulations, may hinder the country from increasing fish production from aquaculture," said Bright Kumwembe, director of finance and administration with the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security in Malawi.

"Food security is a global challenge, requiring innovation and efforts across the international community. The UK will certainly play its part in this global effort," the British Ambassador to China Sebastian Wood said at the conference.

The program will provide a platform to extend technology tailored to the needs and conditions of African countries and support joint research to find solutions to food security issues, he said.

"China has a lot of advanced technology in the agricultural sector, which may offer much support to African countries. But how to choose those appropriate technologies and seed varieties, which are adaptable to the actual situation in Africa, are the key to success," said Zhang Feng, a researcher from CABI, a research group in Britain that focuses on agriculture and the environment.

Friday, 12 October 2012

Former Combatants to Get Agricultural Machines

Luanda — About 450 former combatants who are members of farming co-operatives countrywide will receive still this year several machines for agricultural work, in the ambit of a programme of the Agriculture Ministry.

This move is aimed at helping the beneficiaries in their socioeconomic reintegration efforts, ANGOP has learnt.

According to the secretary-general of the Ministry of Former Combatants and Veterans of the Homeland, Feliciano Salomão Himulova, who received the donation on behalf of the incumbent minister, Kundi Paihama, this offer is only intended to benefit those ex-combatants who are members of a farming co-operative.

"This process of upgrading (ex-combatants) and supplying them with certain goods is a project that is estimated at 10 million US dollars, with the beneficiaries being free from any reimbursement, aimed at contributing to the self-sustenance of the co-operatives members and their families, as well as to the increase of national productivity", he explained.

On his turn, António Coutinho, director of MultiAuto, the firm that donated the machines, revealed that in face of the request of the Former Combatants Ministry, the company decided to provide theoretical and practical training of the beneficiaries, so that they can master and take good care of the machinery.
Original Article Here

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...