For her,
going back to explore techniques and resources within the local environment is
a sustainable means for African smallholder farmers, especially rural women who
lack funding, to be climate smart in production.
“The
whole technologies and fertilizers will not help them because they do not have
that support, that is why we must look within; look at how we used to do our
water management, how we used to harvest water from rain and the types of
manures that we used to have around our compounds as Africans and look at
harvesting our seeds and using them again,” she observed.
Mama
Kena, who’s Thojane organic Farming project in Phokeng has won her the national
prize for Best Subsistence Producer, says if there is to be any funding
opportunity for local farmers, it should first go into support to tap into existing
knowledge.
The integration
of local knowledge into new concepts of climate-smart agriculture (CSA) has
been a vocal subject at the 1st Africa CSA Alliance Forum in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia.
The Forum
was convened by the African Union’s NEPAD Agency to further the implementation of
the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) in the next
ten years.
NEPAD
Programmes Director, Mrs Estherine Fotabong, describes the issue of local
indigenous knowledge as critical in advancing climate smart agriculture, hence
the need to listen to farmers observations and cultural practices.
“They
might not be using academic terminologies and words but they tell you what they
observe on the ground, whether in change of seasonal patterns or whether in change
of their planting seasons and they have some solutions,” she noted.
The agriculture-climate
change interaction has been identified as key factor to achieve increased
agriculture productivity.
Under the
proposed NEPAD Geospatial Platform for Sustainable Development (NGP4SD), there
is a harmonization of high quality geographical information, including climate
data sets, for accessibility by governments and citizens of Africa.
The Platform
has applications that support farmers to mitigate and adapt to climate change
using modern technologies.
Mrs. Fotabong
has acknowledged the need to ensure some of the existing traditional practices are
enhanced with modern knowledge and technology, taking into consideration the
family, social and communal relationships.
“How can
knowledge that has passed from centuries to centuries still be there if it was
not scientific? We need to get the knowledge from our grandfathers and grandmothers,
document it, patent it… we need to also leave a legacy for our children,” she
expressed.
Story by
Kofi Adu Domfeh/ in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
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