This
follows the launching of two projects under IFAD grant: Enhancing the
Competitiveness of the High Quality Cassava Flour Value Chain (HQCF) in West
and Central Africa; and Improving Quality, Nutrition and Health Impacts of
Inclusion of Cassava Flour in Bread Formulation in West Africa (Nigeria and
Ghana).
The projects will among others support the generation,
dissemination and adoption of improved technologies for cassava production and
processing; develop and pilot-test a set of integrated best-bet options for
HQCF production and promote market access to secondary products; and develop
and promote appropriate evidence-based models for sustainable value chain
development for African agricultural commodities using HQCF production and
processing.
Dr Alfred Dixon, Project Leader for the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture’s project on Sustainable Weed Management
Technologies for Cassava Systems in Nigeria, said the two IFAD-funded projects
were timely in view of Africa’s comparative advantage in cassava production.
He
described cassava as a poverty fighter, and stressed that improving the
utilization of the crop, and scaling up/out processing technologies would help
Africa address the issue of poverty and hunger on the continent.
“Africa has a comparative advantage in cassava
production… so let us use cassava to get what we want,” he said in Lagos at the
launch of the projects.
Grown
mostly by small scale farmers, cassava is a source of livelihood to about 600
million people in the developing world including Africa, Asia and Latin
America. However, the value chain of the root crop is under developed and
coupled with the relative high perishability of the crop, farmers in Africa are
yet to exploit the full potential of the crop in terms of livelihoods
improvement.
In recent times, researchers from IITA and partners
successfully baked bread using 40 percent cassava in wheat flour, providing an
alternative source of raw material for makers of bread and other
confectionery.
IFAD
sees the inclusion of cassava in bread/confectionery as a major step that
would address food insecurity, create jobs especially for rural youths, and
incomes.
“Our
expectation is that these projects will touch the lives of rural poor farmers,”
Dr Malu Ndavi, Senior Program Officer, IFAD said.
He
urged implementers and partners to work together towards ensuring that the
project’s goals and objectives were delivered on time.
The 18-month project on cassava is for increasing
nutrition and health impacts.
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