
Jun 8 , 2019
By Usman Ali Lawan ( Usman Ali Lawan, an Aspen New Voices fellow, CEO and Chief “Farmer in Suit” at USAIFA International Limited. )
All governments should commit to ensuring that their agriculture, food and nutrition policies are aligned with modern dietary guidelines, which emphasise variety and sustainability in largely plant-based diets, writes Usman Ali Lawan, an Aspen New Voices fellow, CEO and Chief “Farmer in Suit” at USAIFA International Limited. The article was first published on Project Syndicate.
In the rural village of Kura in Kano State, Nigeria, where I grew up, my grandfather would lose more than half of his tomatoes after each harvest. He was not a bad farmer. But bad roads made it difficult for him to get his tomatoes to market, and he had never learned modern methods of preserving them. In an effort to salvage some of his produce, he often dried his tomatoes on the sand.
This is still true of about 80 million rural farmers in Nigeria. Across Sub-Saharan Africa, as much as 50pc of harvested fruit and vegetables, 40pc of roots and tubers and 20% of cereals, legumes and pulses are lost before they reach market. Less than a half-mile away from a major tomato-paste factory in Kadawa, Kano, Nigeria, some 200 rural farmers dry over 40 trailer-loads of fresh tomatoes in the sand every week.
This lack of knowledge and resources among rural farmers contributes substantially to global food insecurity. After all, in the developing world, rural smallholders – most of whom own less than four hectares of farmland – comprise the majority of all farmers. In fact, rural people produce three-quarters of the world’s food, yet they constitute 80pc of the world’s poor.
Delivering enough food to feed the world’s population requires farmers to overcome a series of often-unpredictable challenges, related to factors such as climate change, water scarcity, lack of access to extension services and armed conflict in agricultural areas.
As a result of these challenges, millions of people have been driven from their homes, prevented from working their fields, unable to get their products to markets or cut off from supplies of improved seedlings, fertilizer and financial services.
And the challenges continue to escalate. The number of food emergencies – when disasters such as drought, floods or war lead to food supply shortfalls that demand external assistance – has risen from 15 per year, on average, in the 1980s to more than 30 per year since 2000.
The result is widespread food insecurity. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, more than 820 million people worldwide lacked access to sufficient food in 2017; more than two billion people experience deficiencies of key micronutrients, and more than half of the people living in low-income countries are not sure where their next meal will come from. If current trends hold, the amount of food being grown will feed only half of the world population by 2050.
But these trends can be changed – and Africa is a good place to start. As Akinwumi Adesina, President of the African Development Bank and winner of the 2017 World Food Prize, says, “Africa in the future should not only feed itself, but it must contribute to feeding the world.”
Any strategy to boost food security must emphasize increasing productivity and reducing post-harvest losses. To that end, governments and agro-processing companies should each be doing their part to advance cost-effective measures that take advantage of new technologies, strengthen infrastructure and offer training and support to rural smallholders. Governments, through their various agricultural programs, can help rural farmers to form cooperatives, where they can leverage their collective strength. Private firms, for their part, can provide those farmers with extension services and inputs and serve as major bulk buyers of produce.
This is a proven approach. In Kebbi State, Nigeria, the Anchor Borrower scheme for the Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria – implemented in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria and a government loan program – has boosted rural farmers’ output and incomes by helping them to form cooperatives, providing training and inputs and guaranteeing a buyer.
When designing any such scheme, policymakers must make sure to promote sustainable farming practices that minimize agriculture’s use of natural resources, including soil and water.
All governments should commit to ensuring that their agriculture, food and nutrition policies are aligned with modern dietary guidelines, which emphasize variety and sustainability in largely plant-based diets.
The international community’s goal of ending hunger by 2030 is achievable. But success will require a commitment from both governments and the private sector to help rural farmers shift to sustainable – and profitable – agricultural practices. If that happens, then not only will we end food insecurity, but Adesina’s prediction that “the next generation of billionaires in Africa will be farmers” may come closer to being realised.
PUBLISHED ON
Jun 08,2019 [ VOL
20 , NO
997]
Viewpoints | Oct 23,2021
Fortune News | Jun 04,2022
Viewpoints | Dec 17,2022
Radar | May 08,2021
Viewpoints | Jan 16,2021
Fortune News | Jun 01,2019
Life Matters | Feb 01,2019
Commentaries | Dec 14,2019
Radar | Dec 28,2019
Photo Gallery | Mar 17,2019
Photo Gallery | 69140 Views | May 06,2019
Photo Gallery | 60998 Views | Apr 26,2019
Fortune News | 52924 Views | Jul 18,2020
Fortune News | 52698 Views | Sep 01,2021
Dec 24 , 2022
Biniam Mikru heads the department of cabinet affairs under Mayor Adanech Abiebie. But...
Jul 2 , 2022 . By RUTH TAYE
On a rainy afternoon last week, a coffee processing facility in the capital's Akaki-Qality District was abuzz with activ...
Nov 27 , 2021
Against my will, I have witnessed the most terrible defeat of reason and the most sa...
Nov 13 , 2021
Plans and reality do not always gel. They rarely do in a fast-moving world. Every act...
May 27 , 2023
Tauted as a somnolent giant, Ethiopia's financial scene now stirs, roused by favourab...
May 20 , 2023
The pungent irony wafting from Pretoria last week was hard to miss. Cyril Ramaphosa,...
May 13 , 2023
In March this year, Kamala Harris, the United States Vice President, visited Ghana, T...
May 6 , 2023
The history of the Ethiopian labour movement dates back to the 1940s, marked by perio...
May 27 , 2023
In a triumph over the trials of the pandemic, a rising tide of construction costs and inflation, Zemen Bank has opened a stunning 32-storey...
May 27 , 2023 . By BERSABEH GEBRE
Meqelle is in an animated bid to reclaim control of the management of companies under the Endowment Fund...
May 29 , 2023
Officials at the Addis Abeba City Administration have recently changed the title transfer fees following...
May 27 , 2023 . By MUNIR SHEMSU
The absence of technological equipment to control the contraband trade near national borders and low-qual...