Grains: IDRC, AGRA roll out $2.155m project to curb post harvest loss
Grains:
IDRC, AGRA roll out $2.155m project to curb post harvest loss
…Mechanized
threshers,airtight storage bags introduced
GLOBALLY, one-third of
food produced for human consumption is lost or wasted, the equivalent
of 1.3 billion tons of food per year. In Sub-Saharan Africa – home
to over 230 million people suffering from chronic undernourishment –
the majority of these losses occur after grains have been harvested,
but before they reach the consumer.
About
30 percent of the grains produced in the continent are lost due to
inadequate post-harvest management, lack of structured markets,
inadequate storage, and limited processing capacity. With more than
70 per cent of Africans drawing their livelihoods from agriculture,
finding sustainable solutions to this problem holds tremendous
promise for enhancing inclusive economic growth, food security, and
nutrition.
Over the last decade, many actors have developed a set of
innovative technologies to reduce post-harvest agricultural loss
across the value chain –from the farm to the consumer. A 36-month
project to scale up the use of these technologies across Sub-Saharan
Africa was launched last week in Nairobi. Financed by the
International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and implemented by
the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), the CAD 2.889
million (USD 2.155 million) project will support applied research to
bring effective, field-tested innovations for reducing post-harvest
loss of soybeans and cowpeas to thousands of smallholder farmers in
Mozambique and Burkina Faso.
Speaking at the launch, Dr. Agnes
Kalibata, President of AGRA said that the moment has come to roll out
these technologies across the continent to ensure that smallholder
farmers reap maximum benefit from their investment and hard labour.
“Scaling up of simple technologies like hermetic storage bags can
reduce post-harvest losses by up to 50 per cent and significantly
increase farmers’ income. The deployment of mechanized threshers
will also reduce the drudgery of farming, which is especially
important among women who are the majority of farmers in Africa”,
added Dr.Kalibata.
With Burkina Faso and Mozambique as pilot
countries, the project will help drive these known solutions to scale
and could benefit millions of farmers. In the short term, the
innovations have the ability to directly benefit the lives of at
least 10,000 smallholder farmers and up to 60,000 by 2020. Dr. Simon
Carter, Regional Director for Sub-Saharan Africa at IDRC, hailed the
project as a partnership aimed at increasing food security and
farmers’ incomes, and helping build a stronger agricultural sector
in Africa.
“Reducing post-harvest losses, increasing the quality of
produce and improving farmers’ access to markets are key to
sustaining the productivity driven transformation of the agricultural
sector”, said Dr. Carter. Reducing these losses is increasingly
becoming important as the demand for food increases with population
rise; as part of the push to strengthen farmers’ resilience in the
face of a changing climate; and to take full advantage of the
continent’s food demand, which the World Bank projects will triple
from $313 million in 2010 to $1 trillion by 2030.
Soybean and cowpeas
were selected for this project as they are a critical secondary food,
providing essential affordable proteins as well as calories to the
diets of the poor. The market opportunities for both crops are also
growing, offering prospects to increase income for those farmers
producing a marketable surplus.
Read
more at:
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/grains-idrc-agra-roll-2-155m-project-curb-post-harvest-loss/
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