Gasoline powered simple weeders adapted for
weeding in cassava farms hold promise and may take off the burden of weeding
faced by small-scale farmers in Africa.
Initially acquired as tillers, these simple
tools are being modified and adapted as weeders by the International Institute
of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) led Cassava Weed Management Project. Last year,
the machines were being tested on farmers’ fields across 58 sites in
Nigeria. Following this progress, a team
of Nigerian engineers and fabricators are also working on a local version with
materials sourced locally for its construction.
Demonstrating the machines during a field
trip organized by the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), 25-26
October 2016, in Abeokuta; the Project Leader, IITA-Cassava Weed Management Project,
Dr Alfred Dixon said the adoption of the machines would help smallholder
farmers come out of poverty, and it would create jobs for youths in rural
communities.
The meeting in Abeokuta was aimed at
reviewing the progress, exploring opportunities, and discussing options for
interventions to increase Nigerian cassava farmers’ access to mechanization
services in a sustainable manner.
During the field trip, participants
assessed what weed control options are available for cassava farmers in
particular, and most importantly, to what extent the AATF led Cassava
Mechanisation and Agroprocessing Project (CAMAP) has impacted on the lives of
rural farmers.
A joint resolution by participants endorsed
mechanisation in cassava as the way to go to help resource-poor farmers
especially women and youths out of poverty.
Dr Emmanuel Okogbenin, AATF Director of
Technical Operations while presenting the communiqué of the meeting noted that
mechanisation such as the simple motorised weeders could create a big impact at
farm level, considering that majority of African farmers operate on small
scale.
Based on CAMAP’s experience, tractors and
other bigger machinery are also critical for mechanisation where smallholder
farmers could be mobilised into clusters.
Participants unanimously agreed that the
CAMAP approach to mechanisation deserve support from donors and governments so
the initiative could be taken to scale.
There was also the consensus that future
intervention in mechanisation in Nigeria should capitalise on and align efforts
with ongoing government initiatives such as the Agriculture Equipment Hiring
Enterprises.
Other entry points identified were
individual tractor owners, associations of tractor owners, large farms that
service neighbors, and state and local governments that own tractors.
For more information, please contact:
Godwin Atser, g.atser@cgiar.org,
Communication & Knowledge Exchange Expert
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