Ghana’s Crops Research Institute of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR-CRI) has prioritized the development of superior consumer-acceptable climate-resilient technologies under its 5-year Strategic Plan.
The 2023–2027 strategic plan is targeted at
commercializing agricultural research and innovations to support agricultural
growth and industrialization for improved livelihoods.
“We have not gotten the kind of support that we have
been expecting from industry. Our main support has been coming from donors, but
within this strategic plan we are going to make a very conscious effort to
bring in industry,” said Dr. Maxwell Asante, Deputy Director of CSIR-CRI and
Chairperson of the implementing committee of the strategic plan.
The CSIR-CRI broad research mandate covers food and
industrial crops; including cereals, legumes, roots and tubers, tropical fruits
and vegetables.
The production of these crops is under the threat of
climate change as farmers experience erratic rains in recent times.
Projections by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) suggest that warming scenarios risk having devastating effects on
crop production and food security, especially for Africa where agriculture
accounts for the majority of livelihoods.
Key risks to agriculture include reduced crop
productivity associated with heat and drought stress and increased pest damage,
disease damage and flood impacts on food system infrastructure, resulting in
serious adverse effects on food security and on livelihoods at the regional,
national and individual household levels.
The CSIR-CRI supports farmers to adopt new agricultural
technologies.
Dr. Asante observed without access to irrigation,
improved seedlings and agronomic technologies, farmers are unable to be climate
resilient.
“The whole idea is to equip breeders with new
technologies to breed varieties that are for this current environment because
if you bred a variety 30 years ago and farmers are cultivating it now, it was
not bred for that environment,” he noted.
“We have equipped our breeders with modern tools, DNA,
markers, speed breeding so that every two years, they can generate new
varieties and those varieties will be tested in this current environment and
therefore it will work for our farmers in their field.
Farmers, traditionally, are inclined to clear new fields
for crop production, in which process they contribute to deforestation and
depletion of carbon sinks that eventually lead to climate change.
The crop researchers are already encouraging farmers to
plant on continuously cropped fields, especially in the production of yam. This
means they will not open up new areas to have the carbon sinks intact.
According to Dr. Foster Boateng, Management Board Chair
of CSIR-CRI, “research is coming out with varieties that are drought-tolerant.
Because now you know that climate change has set in… research must come out
with varieties that can command genetic advantage. That can withstand drought.
That can withstand diseases and pests. Otherwise, there's nothing we can do.
“And we can't put more land under cultivation. Because
when you put more land under cultivation, we know that agriculture also speeds
up deforestation. So once you research and get genetic materials that command
that advantage, we can go on vertical expansion in production rather than
horizontal expansion in production”.
The adoption of climate smart agricultural practices is
the way to go for Ghanaian farmers.
The farmers will need resilient crop varieties and
farming technologies, increased diversification of agriculture systems,
promotion of simple irrigation facilities, and training to change from the old ways
of farming.
“Our agronomists are also doing a lot, they are doing
things like new irrigation technologies so that we don't use a lot of water in
the field; we are looking for technologies that use less nitrogen so that there
is less emission of greenhouse gases. The varieties, the agronomy and training,
a lot of training in farmers are part of the strategy,” said Dr. Asante.
He believes the partnership with industry will help
finance research and make technologies accessible to farmers.
“We have products we can launch to industrial people who
want to pay a little for us to plough back into our research; show them
different varieties and technologies associated with it for them to invest in
the technologies,” noted the rice breeder.
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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