IITA to commercialise, disseminate aflatoxin biocontrol products to farmers in Africa
The International Institute for
Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Ibadan, and partners has said that it
will commercialise, disseminate first aflatoxin bio-control products
to farmers in Africa.
A statement by the IITA Communication
Specialist, Mrs Adaobi Umeokoro, on Thursday said that the institute,
partners had commenced a project to ensure that aflasafe products
reach the farmers.
“African farmers will soon have a
product that will ensure safer food for their families and
communities, a natural product called aflasafe that can reduce
contamination from aflatoxin.
“The aflasafe will be made available
in at least 11 countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
“Following the success of aflasafe –
the first indigenous bio-control innovation for the prevention of
aflatoxin contamination on the fields and store houses of maize and
groundnut farmers in Africa.
“IITA is now set to enable
commercialisation of the technology to ensure that farmers in need of
the product will have access to it,” he said.
According to him, more than 4.5 billion
people in the developing world are exposed to aflatoxins,
carcinogenic poisons produced by a fungus that contaminates crops.
He said that Aflatoxins were
detrimental to human health, and could even cause death as they
suppress immune systems associated with stunting in children.
“Aflasafe is a revolutionary
bio-control product developed by IITA, United States Department of
Agriculture – Agriculture Research Service (USDA-ARS), and national
partners.
“So far, aflasafe has been reported
to achieve up to 98 per cent efficacy in reducing grain contamination
on the fields and stores of farmers where aflasafe products are
registered.
“IITA envisages a scenario where
every African farmer will apply the product on their field, producing
aflatoxin-safe grains for their families and communities buying from
the market.
“This is expected to positively
affect the heath conditions of people and improve profitability of
maize and groundnut value chains,” he said.
Umeokoro said that the new aflasafe
Technology Transfer and Commercialisation Project (aTTC), funded by a
$20 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and
USAID, was launched last December 2016 to be implemented in 11
countries.
The countries where Burkina Faso, the
Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania,
Uganda, and Zambia.
“aTTC will be led by IITA with
support from USDA-ARS, Chemonics, Dalberg Global Development
Advisors, the Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa of the
African Union (PACA), national institutions, and Regional Economic
Communities such as the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS).
“aTTC places partnership with the
private sector at the core and is working with business partners that
can help to achieve the goal of producing an effective, affordable
product.
“To get aflasafe to the masses, we
need many companies, millions of small-scale farmers, distributors,
who know what aflasafe can do to apply it,” he said.
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