From surviving to thriving: How AfDB is helping transform agriculture in Africa - new report
*97 percent of the Bank’s agriculture
projects rated satisfactory.
**4000 kilometers of feeder roads
built; three million people trained on farming practices
***150,000 microcredit loans, water
systems on 181,000 hectares of farmland
By 2025, Africa aims to feed its fast
growing population with its own production. What is more, the world
will need Africa’s help to feed an extra two billion people in the
coming generation. So making the right investments right now is
crucial to unleash the huge potential of Africa’s farms and
agribusinesses.
The African Development Bank (AfDB), as
one of the leading investors in agriculture in the continent, has
been firmly on track on how it has deployed US$5.5 billion in
investments in the agriculture sector over five years to 2015, the
new Development Effectiveness Review on Agriculture released today
shows.
Here is a brief report card of the
AfDB’s topline results: the Bank trained three million people on
better farming practices, put 20,000 food marketing and storage into
use, constructed four thousand kilometers of feeder roads, offered
150,000 microcredit loans, irrigated and built other water systems on
181,000 hectares of farmland.
“The Development Effectiveness Review
is mission accomplished, as the AfDB sets out an even more ambitious
agenda in its Feed Africa strategy to end hunger and extreme poverty
by 2025”, said Simon Mizrahi, Director of Quality Assurance and
Results Department that authored the Development Effectiveness Review
on Agriculture.
Making no little plans
The Review details the progress and the
pitfalls to date in transforming Africa’s agriculture sector, and
lays out what steps must be taken to catapult Africa into becoming a
global agricultural powerhouse in the next decade. In recent years,
agriculture has zoomed to the top of Africa’s policy agenda, with
African countries pledging to eradicate hunger and halve post-harvest
losses in under a decade.
It has become increasingly clear that
“investing in agriculture is the best way to end hunger,
malnutrition, and extreme poverty in Africa,” the development
report states. Given that seven out of 10 Africans earn a living from
the land, agriculture can create economic growth spread more evenly
across society, and extending deeper into rural areas, and helping
more women, who make up 70 percent of farmers. The report also
pointed out that agriculture can create jobs for the 10 million young
Africans entering the labor force every year.
Africa has tremendous scope to grow and
develop its farming sector and make it an engine of economic growth,
the report highlighted: Africa imports twice the food it exports, and
agriculture yields in Africa are only one-quarter those of China.
African agriculture makes up a mere five percent of global trade.
At the same time, improving the lot of
farmers and farming is crucial to the sustainable growth and
development of Africa: eighty percent of the typical household budget
is spent on food, while forty percent of food produced spoils after
the harvest, due to bad or nonexistent roads or lack of storage.
A more robust agriculture system is
also key to ending hunger, the Development report says, since one out
of four people lacks regular access to food. What is more,
agricultural development must be reoriented to factor in climate
change: 65 percent of Africa’s arable land is now degraded, and
moisture and fertility losses in African soils are worsening.
Over the last five years, the report
detailed how AfDB steered its investments into promoting the
continent’s transition to commercial agriculture: building up
regional transport corridors to link rural farmers to city centers
and ports, providing irrigation and building canals to reduce
vulnerability to drought, planting over 64 million trees to boost the
land’s hardiness in the face of climate change, and bringing
agriculture experts together to collaborate, such as the Alliance for
a Green Revolution in Africa, which helps family farms across 18
African countries.
Making headway
Some of the Bank’s most noteworthy
operations cited in the report during the period include the Africa
Food Crisis Response Programme, which fast-tracked relief that raised
US$1.0 billion and led to better harvests; New Rice for Africa, which
boosted the hardiness, nutrition and yields of rice and improved the
livelihoods of almost a quarter of a million subsistence farmers,
with a large share of the development for women’s groups; and the
Congo Basin Forest Partnership, which reduced deforestation and
degradation by producing millions of trees and agroforest saplings,
involving almost 50,000 people in producing and processing non-timber
forest products and creating 46,60 hectares of community forest
plantations.
One of the largest contributions of the
AfDB in shaping the agriculture agenda was its leading role during
the Feeding Africa conference in Dakar in October 2015, helping craft
a plan for Africa to transform Africa’s agriculture sector. The
plan is designed to ramp up nutrition programs, boost agriculture
productivity through research, develop farming corridors and
agribusiness industrial zones to get infrastructure support, set up a
risk-sharing facility, start raising US$3 billion to finance women
farmers, and develop diaspora agriculture bonds based on remittances
flows.
Progress report card
The sum total of these efforts showed
the AfDB has made good progress on several fronts: 97 percent of the
Bank’s agriculture projects were rated satisfactory. In the
meantime, project approval times shrank to six months from nine
months. Largely as a result of the Bank’s Integrated Safeguards on
social and environmental impact and its enhanced focus on gender
equality, 89% of projects had a climate-informed design, and 87%
factored in gender differences, major improvements on both aspects.
The number of projects managed by field offices grew to 70%, a leap
from 40%, to meet the demand of member countries to working more
closely with the Bank.
Doubling down
Now the AfDB is gearing up to deliver
more under its new strategy through 2025 by investing US$24 billion,
and boosting overall investment through equity, debt, risk and other
financial means.
AfDB’s new Feed Africa strategy is
one of its High Five priorities, which aims to end poverty, hunger,
and malnutrition by 2025 and make the continent a net food exporter.
The Bank will achieve this by focusing on certain foods and growing
zones, from wheat in North Africa to fish farming everywhere, and
making Africa’s food value chains world-class by building markets,
setting up commodity exchanges and linking farmers and buyers, among
other means. Feed Africa will support agribusiness and innovation,
climate-smart agriculture and build roads, energy, and water
infrastructure.
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