Agriculture Reboot Could Lead To Prosperity In Poor And Food Insecure Regions

Agriculture Reboot Could Lead To Prosperity

Agriculture experts from The Australian National University (ANU) have teamed up with government bodies and NGOs in sub-Saharan Africa to improve irrigation schemes and boost crop production.

The researchersโ€™ work is improving food security, reducing water waste and lifting people out of poverty.

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โ€œThis simple reboot of irrigation schemes made up of small farms could help stamp out poverty in farming communities around the world,โ€ Professor Jamie Pittock, from the ANU Fenner School of Environment and Society, said.

The โ€˜transforming irrigation in southern Africaโ€™ project is empowering farmers by giving them the knowledge and tools needed to consistently grow high-yielding and profitable crops while minimising water usage. The research is published in Nature Food.

โ€œHundreds of millions of dollars have been invested in infrastructure to support irrigation systems and grow crops that return a profit, but unfortunately crop yields in Africa are very low and often not much better than the dry land farms around them,โ€ Professor Pittock said.

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โ€œAfrica has one of the largest populations living in rural areas that depend on agriculture for their livelihoods but sadly irrigation schemes have traditionally been somewhat of a failed sector across the continent.

โ€œOur interventions have been directed at rebooting these failed irrigation schemes so that they do produce food reliably, they are profitable, and they bring people out of poverty.โ€

This system reboot involves providing farmers with simple-to-use tools โ€” developed by CSIRO โ€” to help them measure whether the soil in their fields is wet enough and has sufficient nutrients to grow a high-yielding crop. This empowers the farmers to make their own decisions rather than relying on government help.

This new intervention has proven to be more successful than past government-led methods used to grow crops in which farmers were advised to apply specific amounts of fertiliser to grow crops such as maze or corn.

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โ€œWhat we found was governments werenโ€™t helping farmers do a simple cost and profit loss assessment of the crops they were growing, so we have provided the farmers with basic field books to help them calculate what itโ€™ll cost to grow a crop and the necessary labour required and figure out how much income theyโ€™ll get from growing that crop,โ€ Professor Pittock said.

Professor Pittock says these simple but effective interventions have proven โ€œrevolutionaryโ€ because farmers are minimising their water usage.

Agriculture Reboot Could Lead To Prosperity

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โ€œPrior to this they were putting too much water on their fields and actually drowning their crops. Knowing how much water they need to grow their crops means the farmers are conserving water and saving up to two days of labour a week, which can instead be spent on other livelihood activities,โ€ he said.

โ€œThere is also more water available to support other farmers and the rivers.

โ€œBecause the farmers are no longer clashing over water, theyโ€™re starting to work together to share resources and help one another maximise food production in the region. In the process, weโ€™re seeing farmers employ those in their community resulting in a much-needed boost to the economy.โ€

While this intervention has been โ€œextremely successfulโ€ in helping farmers grow food, Professor Pittock says producing high-yielding crops means nothing if farmers are flooding the market with product and driving down the price of that food so much so that itโ€™s not very profitable for them to grow it.

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To address this issue, the ANU researchers facilitated conversations between the farmers and buyers to give them insight into the market and inform their farming decisions.

โ€œWhen the farmers start to have that dialogue with the buyers, they can then work together to negotiate a planting schedule so theyโ€™re continually producing crops that are in demand,โ€ Professor Pittock said.

โ€œOnce the farmers know what quality of product the buyers want and expect, all of a sudden theyโ€™re getting much higher prices for their product.

โ€œWeโ€™ve also introduced the farmers to seed and fertiliser suppliers and since theyโ€™re now cooperating with one another, the farmers are starting to buy quality inputs in bulk, which is driving down their overheads because theyโ€™re paying less than what they were when they were buying only for themselves.

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โ€œWeโ€™ve since surveyed the farmers weโ€™ve worked with whoโ€™ve told us that with the extra money they now have, they are buying more nutritious food for their family, investing in healthcare and are paying for their children to have an education.

โ€œThese sorts of techniques used to empower farmers with knowledge could make a tremendous difference in terms of supporting more sustainable development and will be critical in helping the poorest members of society in rural areas achieve better livelihoods.โ€

Source: Andrรฉ F. Van Rooyen, Henning Bjornlund, Jamie Pittock. Beyond fertilizer for closing yield gaps in sub-Saharan Africa. Nature Food, 2021; 2 (10): 756 DOI: 10.1038/s43016-021-00386-7

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