Africa needs to double her
cassava production to avert a major food crisis by 2050, says the Director for
the Global Cassava Partnership for the 21st Century (GCP21), Dr.
Claude Fauquet in Lagos.
Addressing a world press
conference in Lagos, Dr. Fauquet described the low root yields of cassava in
Africa as unacceptable and called on member nations to adequately invest in the
crop to change the current yield per hectare.
Though accounting for 55
percent of global cassava root production, Africa’s yield per hectare is the
lowest in the world with about 10 tons per ha as opposed to Asia where average yield
is 21 tons per hectare—or double the yield in Africa.
Dr. Fauquet, whose speech
comes ahead of the Forth International Cassava Conference in Cotonou, Republic
of Benin in 11-15 June 2018, said a do-nothing approach would hurt the
continent as it would have to contend with more people to feed, and changes in
climate that would become more unpredictable.
He argued that to reverse
the current trajectory would demand deliberate steps including greater
investment in research and innovations, provisions of a favorable policy
framework, accessibility of loans to farmers at single digit rates, and
mechanization across the value chain.
According to him, Africa
needs to scale out proven technologies including the recommendations on weed
control being developed by the Cassava Weed Management Project, improved
cassava varieties, and best-bet agronomic practices such as appropriate
fertilizer application.
“If we do these, then to
double cassava yield will not be a dream but a possibility,” he said.
Dr. Fauquet said while
technologies existed to transform cassava, not many policy makers were aware of
such technologies, adding that the forthcoming Global Conference on Cassava
with the theme “Cassava Transformation in Africa” was a unique opportunity that
would create an environment for exchange of technical, scientific,
agricultural, industrial and economic information about cassava among strategic
stakeholders like scientists, farmers, processors, end-users, researchers, the
private sector, and donor agencies.
According to him, 300
participants including policymakers, scientists, farmers, processors,
end-users, researchers, the private sector, and donor agencies would be
participating in the conference on 11-15 June 2018.
He reiterated that the aim
of the Conference was to raise awareness on the importance of cassava in the
world, reviewing recent scientific progress, identifying and setting priorities
for new opportunities and challenges while charting a course to seek Research
and Development (R&D) support for areas where it is currently inadequate.
The Director Designate of
GCP21, Professor Malachy Akoroda noted that the Conference would provide an
opportunity for African countries to tap the best, current, and most innovative
technologies that would transform cassava value chains across Africa.
“This Conference is a
shining opportunity for Africa,” he added.
Founded in 2003, GCP21 is a
not-for-profit international alliance of 45 organizations and coordinated by
Drs. Fauquet and Joe Tohme of the International Center for Tropical Agriculture
(CIAT). It aims to fill gaps in cassava research and development towards
unlocking the potential of cassava for food security and wealth creation for
farmers, processors, transporters, marketers, and packaging enterprises.
The 2018 Global Cassava
Conference is supported by several major institutions including the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation, International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
(IITA), International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), CGIAR Roots
Tubers and Banana, African Development Bank (AfDB), French Institute in Benin,
French Embassy, CORAF, Forum for Agriculture Research in Africa (FARA), INRAB -
Institut National Agronomique du Benin, and FAS-UAC - Faculté des Sciences
Agronomiques de l’Université Abomey – Calavi, Republic of Benin.
A larger number of
organizations will join the Conference, sponsoring special events, travel
grants, workshops, satellite meetings, as well as private companies from the
different parts of the world that will have the possibility to show-case their
products at exhibition booths.
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