Agricultural Innovations and Technologies |
The West and
Central African Council for Agricultural Research and Development
(CORAF/WECARD), with the support of the World Bank, recently rolled out
an initiative aimed at placing innovative climate-smart technologies in
the hands of farmers so that they are better protected from the impacts
of climate change. This is sorely needed.
The African continent and African agriculture is expected to be hit hard by the changing climate according to a recent report
by The World Bank. African smallholder farmers who depend on
agriculture as their source of livelihood suffer the impacts of a
changing climate, such as drought and extremely high temperatures, increased water shortages and food insecurity.
Ensuring that they have access to new technologies would help them to
improve agricultural productivity and increase their resilience to the
impact of climate change.
The increasing
occurrence and severity of extreme weather events linked to climate
change necessitates all stakeholders involved in agriculture, including
national governments, public and private research institutions,
universities and non-governmental organizations, ramp up their efforts
of making sure that newer agricultural innovations and technologies are
available to farmers.
Luckily enough, new
agricultural tools, innovations and technologies such as those that are
going to be rolled out by CORAF/WECARD are launched almost every day in
Africa. From stress tolerant crop varieties, to better crop seeds, to soil health building innovations, to innovative solar powered irrigation technologies to apps and drones.
If adopted, these game-changing innovations can help improve Africa’s
agricultural productivity and help farmers to thrive and become food
secure even under the changing climate.
The question then
arises, how can development practitioners that are coming up with these
innovations scale up the adoption and use of these technologies? How do
we make these innovations and technologies easy for them to master?
Demonstration farms
The truth is most
of the new agricultural technologies and innovations are not easy to
grasp. There is a need to provide avenues for farmers to learn this
technology. Demonstration farms can effectively serve as an avenue to help showcase, spread, and accelerate the adoption of these game-changing innovations.
Indeed, several countries including Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda and Tanzania are actively using demonstration farms to help spread some of the newer agricultural tools, technologies and innovations.
At the same time, some NGOs like Development in Gardening and research institutions like the Alliance for Green Revolution in Africa
have used demonstration farms as tools to spread agricultural
innovations. Other African countries should follow suit. What’s more is
that demonstration farms could help African farmers learn about newer
concepts such as precision agriculture: a system that makes sure that crops and soils get exactly the inputs they need for maximum growth and productivity.
Extension services
Agricultural extension
encompasses a wide range of supportive programs that exist around
farmers to help them to utilize research findings and other newer
agricultural innovations and technologies. It includes trainings,
advisory services and technology transfer schemes.
Across Africa,
there are numerous examples where extension services have played a
crucial role in spreading and increasing the adoption of newer
innovations. In Ethiopia,
for example, agricultural extension helped increase the adoption of
improved Tef (one of Ethiopia’s commonly consumed cereal) seed
varieties. Because of agricultural extension, in four years, the number of farmers planting this cereal increased from 300 to 7741. Similar agricultural extension successes have been recorded in other countries including Uganda and Mozambique.
Digital extension in particular may enhance the success of extension services
in Africa since about two-thirds of Africans have mobile phones.
Indeed, several stakeholders including NGO’s have taken advantage of the
digital boom to help scale up and spread new innovations. In Kenya for
example, through cell phones Ojay Greene shares about new varieties and inputs farmers need to use to succeed in their farming ventures. And in 2014, the Government of Kenya launched e-extension program
- a program that would allow the government to share to over 7 million
farmers up-to-date information and other agricultural tools needed to
improve agricultural productivity. Other countries that are utilizing
digital extension include Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania.
The changing
climate necessitates that farmers stay ahead and have access to the
tools and innovations being rolled out every day. By making it easy for
farmers to mentally grasp and use these technologies, African
smallholder farmers can strengthen their resilience to climate change.
Just like in It’s time for governments, universities, research
institutions and private partners and NGO’s to join together and help
make game-changing research and technologies available to farmers.
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