Value Cassava Products |
Cassava is
identified as one of the emerging market oriented commodities will
improve the livelihood of smallholder farmers in Uganda if it is grown
and processed as high quality product to attract industrial market
potential.
Cassava is
considered a food security crop because it can grow in several climatic
conditions including areas that experience prolonged dry spells.
Commercialization of high value products from it can be done at a small scale with high
quality cassava flour being the main product traded.
This flour can be used to make glue and paper board and also as an ingredient in making ethanol.
Dr Ephrahim
Nuwamanya, a scientist at NaCRRI's Nutritional and Bio-analytical
Laboratory, explains that his team has established that it can be
fermented to make ethanol, which is used in laboratories for various
purposes.
High quality cassava flour is also used by pharmaceutical industries in the making of tablets. Africa Innovations
Institute, which is based Kampala, is currently promoting a project
called Cassava Adding Value for Africa (C:AVA), which develops high
quality cassava flour so as to improve livelihoods of farmers growing
the crop as direct beneficiaries.
The $200,000
(Shs709m) Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation-funded project is also being
implemented in other countries: Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania and Malawi.
In Uganda, the beneficiaries are from Budaka, Kibuku, Pallisa, BuKedea, Kumi, Soroti, Serere, Ngora, Oyam, Kole and Lira.
Farmers in these districts are given the Nase14 variety and sensitised on good post-harvest handling methods.
Dr Francis Alacho
Quruma, the project's country manager, noted that farmers have an
advantage of earning increased income if they maintain quality of
cassava flour for industrial processing.
Since the
implementation of this initiative, the sale of high value cassava flour
increased in a year with a total of 805.3 tonnes of high quality cassava
sold across various sectors.
The breakdown was
as follows: biscuits processing industries (two tonnes), paper board
(177 tonnes), rural bakeries (275.1 tonnes) and agri food composite
flours (388.9 tonnes).
The aim of promoting high quality cassava flour is to convince farmers to process it as an industrial product.
Brewing industries,
for instance, are already working in collaboration with farmers because
they need the product as a brewing product.
"In Uganda, 10
million litres of ethanol is being processed by breweries annually with
imported raw material yet starch from cassava can be processed to
glucose and sucrose, which can be used by these industries including
pharmaceuticals," Dr Quruma points out.
Farmers processing high value cassava products stand high chance of readily available market for their produce.
"We link them to
factories which make confectionaries and bread, as well as those making
paper boards from cassava glue where most of the raw material is
imported from India," he explained.
In this initiative,
the key thing to consider is supply of clean cassava stock to farmers
to ensure challenges of cassava mosaic virus and cassava brown streak
diseases are avoided.
There are several
farmers who have been certified to multiply clean stock of Nase14
obtained from the National Crop Resources Research Institute (NaCRRI) in
Namulonge for multiplication.
These farmers are spread out in various districts in Eastern and Northern Uganda.
To note
The director of
Africa Innovations Institute, Prof George William Otim Nape noted that
research work at the institute is aimed at impacting of the farming
communities with the main focus on food security.
The reason is that the value chain is key component of the activities.
He pointed out that
countries like India and China are producing 60 to 80 metric tonnes per
hectare yet Uganda is producing about 30 metric tonnes per hectare yet
the demand for quality cassava is so high.
Expert's notes
Safe to grow
"We are
experiencing varying conditions in the climate. One of the crops which
will be safe to grow under these varying conditions is cassava. This
because where there is hailstorm, drought and flooding, farmers will
still be in position to harvest cassava".
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