Tag: agricultural productivity

  • Enhancing agricultural productivity through research

    Enhancing agricultural productivity through research

    Sir: No doubt, Nigeria’s agriculture is struggling to unleash its full capacity despite many efforts. It is worrying, that the overall productivity of the sector hasn’t dramatically improved in the face of growing population, nutritional deficiency, effect of climate change, volatile food prices and pervasive poverty.

    Agricultural production continues to be hobbled by familiar challenges associated with low crop yield, incidence of pest and diseases, post- harvesting losses, plummeting soil fertility etc.

    The poor state of agriculture underscores the necessity for extraordinary approaches and strategies in circumventing the host of challenges to unlock the boundless capacity of agriculture to ensure it serve its purposes.

    In 2013 in Maputo, the African Union (AU) under the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Program (CAADP) laid out an elaborate plan for the development of Africa’s agriculture with an agreement by member states for the allocation of 10% of public expenditure to agriculture and an 6% annual growth of the sector. In 2014, under the Malabo declaration, member states reaffirmed their commitment to the vision.

    Interestingly, meeting the goal as enshrined in the CAADP remains a tall order! A case in point is the 2025 national budget. Agriculture was allotted N826.5 billion which constitute about 1.73% of the total budget of N47.97 trillion – a far cry from the agreement. In the budget, 40 research institutes were allocated N126.03 billion while federal universities of agriculture got N54.38 billion.

    The allocation to the institutions is paltry judging from the huge financial requirement inherent in undertaking any meaningful research activity and in running the institutions.  The Pillar IV of the CAADP placed emphasis on agricultural Research and Development (R&D).

    A vibrant research- led approach stands as a conspicuous missing link in the chain of agricultural production. We are witnesses to the infinite human ingenuity which has always been brought to bear in making agriculture responsive to emerging challenges leading to massive revolution in the sector through a multidisciplinary approach.

    Research has always provided answers to challenging questions that has change the trajectory of agriculture.  Agricultural research ensures that new technologies, techniques and practices are developed to improve productivity.

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    Instructively, improving agricultural productivity is a fool-proof strategy for promoting inclusive economic development and reducing poverty. Through the strategy, the income of farm households is ramped up and food cost curtailed which serves as a cushion to non-farm households who are known to expend a massive amount of their income on food.

    Agricultural research has a long history in Nigeria leading to the establishment of many research institutes and universities of agriculture, as well as a body known as Agricultural Research Council of Nigeria saddled with the responsibility of supervising and coordinating agricultural research and extension activities.

    In effect, the country has one the most elaborate National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) in Africa.

    Through public funding, the institutions have recorded massive achievement. However, they are currently a shadow of their former selves. Their current state tells a sad story of neglect and underfunding. The entire institutions have a similitude of challenges which continue to limit the actualization of their mandate.

    The institutions need to be well funded to promote productivity, sustainable growth and general transformation of the sector. It is against this background, that the recent National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF) report on the baseline survey and need assessment carried out on 16 agricultural institutions and 17 colleges of agriculture requires massive attention in order to place the research institutions on the path of glory.

    Research and Development can never be successful without sufficient funding. The effectiveness and efficiency of the research can be narrowed to the generous monetary allocation that will cover the operating costs of the institutions, salaries, training and capacity building, investment in modern laboratories, equipment, relevant research facilities and data management system.  

    The entire approach to research needs to be attractive enough to draw and retain talents. The place of accountability and transparency cannot easily be discounted in the entire management system of the research institutions.  Also, is the need for strengthening the extension system. Access to new technology and practices by the end users through the agency of a vibrant extension system is imperative and must have its wheels adequately oiled.

    In the final analysis, productivity will further be enhanced through the synthesis of improved agricultural research funding and the continuation of policies reforms.

    •Abachi Ungbo, abachi007@yahoo.com

  • AATF: Boosting agricultural productivity in Africa via innovation

    AATF: Boosting agricultural productivity in Africa via innovation

    The African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), since its establishment has been in the forefront of driving agricultural production in Africa and transforming the livelihoods of farmers through innovative agricultural technologies. JULIANA AGBO, writes

    The AATF is a non-governmental organisation founded in 2003 with its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya.

    Formed in response to the need for an effective mechanism that would facilitate and support negotiation for technology access and delivery and formation of appropriate partnerships to manage the development and deployment of innovative technologies for use by smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the foundation believes that access to agricultural technologies will boost the productivity of smallholder farmers.

    AATF, which is active in 24 countries of East, Southern and West Africa, is driven by the vision of a prosperous and food secure Africa, where smallholder farmers’ livelihoods are transformed by innovation.

    It has its main focus of achieving real meaningful change for farmers through three objectives: Diversifying agricultural technologies for SSA farmers, seed and non-seed, mechanical and digital, including innovations and know-how from around the world, that will improve agricultural productivity and enhance nutritional value and post-harvest management of staple and selected non-staple crops.

    While its projects cover a diversified crop portfolio that combines cereals, roots and tubers, legumes and horticultural crops, the foundation is currently addressing challenges bedeviling key staples in Sub-Saharan Africa that include maize, rice, cassava, cowpea, banana and potatoes.

    It has succeeded in using its technology to develop biotech crops such as BT cotton, Pod Borer Resistant (PBR) cowpea and TELA maize in Nigeria.

    The Foundation, having established its seed company in Nigeria, ECOBASIC, is also working with major seed companies such as Maina and Techni seed companies for seed multiplication.

    The Nation learnt that the AATF, through its various projects, has united key stakeholders and positioned technology transfer as a priority for Africa’s agricultural progress.

    Its belief that the use of appropriate technology can improve agricultural productivity in Africa, supports farmers on the continent and especially smallholder farmers in their quest for access to the best agricultural technology.

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    AATF, whose mission is to transform the livelihoods of farmers through innovative agricultural technologies, has been able to reach 16 million smallholder farmers since 2022 through its activities and those of its partners.

    However, its promise to drive expanded access, availability and use of innovative technologies to reach 40 percent of the countries in SSA and increase the incomes of farmers adopting AATF technologies by 20 percent has come to reality.

    AATF has positioned technology transfer as a priority for Africa’s agricultural progress. Furthermore, the AATF supports farmers in Africa and especially smallholder farmers in their quest for access to the best agricultural technology.

    This is done by uniting key stakeholders, and accelerating the commercialisation of agricultural technologies for improved farmer livelihoods.

    Other ways include building capabilities of the private sector to enhance their speed and effectiveness to deliver agricultural technologies to smallholder farmers for the realisation of significant impact at farmer level creating an enabling environment for increased uptake and use of agricultural technologies in SSA .

    AATF also works by addressing policy and regulatory bottlenecks, and market failures affecting the introduction of agricultural technologies while supporting the emergence of efficient market systems and sound science-based regulatory systems that will deliver safe technologies.

    Speaking on how AATF plans to sustain its agricultural development in the continent, the Executive Director, AATF, Dr Canisius Kanangire, said the foundation would continue convening strategic dialogues on agricultural technology in Africa, bringing various voices to weigh in on the contribution of Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) to agricultural development and how Africa can efficiently and effectively leverage it for economic growth and attainment of the Malabo Declaration, Africa’s agriculture vision and the agenda 2063.

    He pointed out that AATF’s new Strategic Plan 2023-2027 builds on gains realised over the last two decades with a clear roadmap on scaling technological interventions for impact.

    “Our roadmap towards delivery of agricultural technologies will not only contribute to food and nutrition security in Africa but will also engender agricultural transformation and resilient food systems in line with the aspirations of the Africa Union (AU) Agenda 2063,” he said.

    He however said the AATF has demonstrated that with technologies Africa can change the narratives which tag the continent as hungry and poor.