African farmers are particularly vulnerable to climate change. |
Kakamega/Kenya
— Agriculture is the most important sector of African economies, from
the livelihoods it supports to the future jobs it can generate.
The basic recipe
for boosting performance is well known: more investment, better access
to financial services, improved seeds, and a lot more fertilizer
(appropriately applied).
What is less
appreciated is the key role played by agricultural extension workers.
They link small-scale farmers to new research, helping to improve their
knowledge and skills so they can take advantage of market opportunities.
In African countries prone to climate shocks, these extension workers
have an increasingly important role to play if farmers are to learn to
adapt and build their resilience. There's just one big problem: governments have tended to ignore extension work.
"The extension
service provider's role is enormous and urgent, especially as [the
unpredictability of] climate change has brought a new dimension to
agricultural research and development," Max Olupot, of the African Forum
for Agricultural Advisory Services, told IRIN.
In addition,
Qureish Noordin, from the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa
(AGRA), warned that climate variability is distorting "a huge portion of
indigenous knowledge", making the design of "realistic and practical
adaptation programmes" even harder.
African
agriculture, in general, is massively underfunded. In 2003, African
governments agreed to the Maputo Declaration, committing 10 percent of
spending to agriculture. But only 13 countries have ever managed to
reach that target in any one year.
Two decades of IMF
programming had pushed governments to cut spending, diminishing the
reach and quality of the assistance provided to small-scale producers.
The UN's Food and
Agricultural Organization recommends there should be one extension
worker for every 400 farmers. In the rich world, the ratio is roughly
one to 200, but in Africa it's closer to one to 3,000, according to
Noordin.
The Kenyan example
Kenya has the
largest, most diversified economy in East Africa, and farming is its
market-driven mainstay. In 2010, it adopted a new constitution supposed
to devolve significant powers to county governments.
But in reality,
agricultural policy is still set at the national level and there is a
complicated relationship with the counties over responsibilities for the
day-to-day running and financing of services and programmes.
Kakamega is a lush
county in western Kenya, a seven-hour drive from Nairobi. More than 80
percent of its population is directly employed in the agricultural
sector.
The Kenyan
government should be stepping up its help for farmers here, but since
devolution there's been a drop in the number of extension workers
employed.
Currently, the ratio is roughly one to 3,000-5,000 farmers, according to Johnston Imbira, the county's director of agriculture.
"The number has
decreased due to officers retiring and exiting from the service since
devolution," Imbira told IRIN. "There are no deliberate efforts to
support day-to-day extension delivery as it does not appeal to the
county legislators compared to roads, which are visible to the
electorate [and are a vote-winner]."The county spends less than 4 percent on agriculture annually, despite the government's 10 percent target.
"Expertise is
dwindling," said Jacob Masimba, an extension research liaison and
training officer. "There is no regular short course training, even with
climate change."
That's bad news for
farmers like Harrison Wesa, a 63-year-old retired teacher who grows
bananas on his irrigated, half-hectare plot. "We used to have monthly
visitations by government officers," he told IRIN. "Today, you are lucky
to be visited."
Wesa was forced to
abandon vegetable farming due to unpredictable rains and a rise in
insect infestation. He soon found he was spending far too much on
pesticides, pushed by agro-dealers out to turn a profit.
With losses
mounting, his son introduced him to the internet, where he soon found
plenty of websites on banana production. "My challenge [now] is too much
information that at times confuses me," he said.
Noordin recognised
this problem well. "Even if some farmer can download some of the
information, they might require help to interpret some of the messages,"
he explained.
Smartphone use is
spreading, but not all small-scale farmers can individually afford the
data charges for downloading YouTube videos on the latest techniques,
few of which are in Kiswahilli, the most broadly spoken language in
Kenya.
New approaches
But there are alternatives. In many countries,
extension services are going through profound change, out of necessity.
What used to be a centrally controlled, top-down model is increasingly
more participatory, farmer-led, and market-orientated.
Farm Africa is an
international NGO that has been working with East African farming
communities for decades. Its approach includes not only a
farmer-to-farmer extension model in which "elite" farmers are trained
and pass on the message to their peers, but also partnerships with the
private sector.
Geoffrey Nyamota,
Farm Africa's head of market engagement, explained how private
businesses buying peas and beans are now providing extension services
"directly to the farmers".
"Public-private
partnerships are a win-win," he told IRIN. "The government is happy, as
they know their goals will be delivered on; the private sector is happy,
because they get the quality they need."
Farm Africa has
also tested mobile technology in Tanzania, with farmers viewing
interactive training modules on tablet computers, as an alternative to
traditional demonstration plots. It found that farmers trained using
tablets were able to achieve similar increases in knowledge of sesame
cultivation, but for about a third of the cost.
And old-fashioned
radio still has a role to play, acting as a "megaphone" for extension
work. Typically, farmers group themselves into listeners' clubs and can
call in or use SMS to participate in the FM programmes.
And while some
governments don't appear to be getting the message yet, Agriculture for
Impact, an advocacy initiative, says a revitalised and expanded role for
advisory and information services is now seen "as central to pro-poor
agricultural growth".
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