Experts have defined food security as “the state of having
reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food”. This emphasizes
three main aspects: availability, accessibility, and nutritious.
Sub-Saharan Africa faces specific and complex challenges.
The number of hungry people in the continent rose to 239 million last
year and 40% of children under five years old are stunted due to
malnutrition. Africa's population is expected to almost double by 2050,
bringing it to almost 2 billion people. Based on present trends, the current
African food production system would be able to meet only 13% of the
continent's needs by 2050.
Challenges
Food insecurity in Sub-Saharan Africa is caused by more than
just inadequate access to agricultural machinery, however. Population growth,
weak institutions and rule of law (particularly in relation to land ownership),
poor infrastructure, increasingly unpredictable and volatile weather patterns,
weak international trade links, limited storage facilities, food loss and
waste, pestilence, disease and economic instability have also taken a toll.
While better access to agricultural technologies could ameliorate some of those
factors, it will prove insufficient to overcome all of the social, political
and economic challenges that also affect regional food security.
Low agricultural
productivity is often cited as the main cause of food insecurity across the
region; crop yields are 44 per cent lower than the international average.
Lifting farm productivity is therefore seen as the main way to improve food
security in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Most African countries do not have food self-sufficiency,
thus imports are essential to feed their ever-growing populations. It should
also be noted that intra-regional trade is very low in Africa, particularly in
the agriculture sector, which is often attributed to the complexity of trading
and logistics with neighboring countries. Agricultural supply chains can be
extremely complex and fragmented, particularly in African countries.
The lack of modern tools is one of the main impediments to
increased agricultural productivity in Africa and is one of the reasons that it
has been a net importer of food since the 1970s. The scarcity of machinery across
the food production system, from field preparation to sowing, harvest,
post-harvest storage, processing, transport and retail, makes Sub-Saharan
Africa’s food security considerably more vulnerable than that of the rest of
the world. While some African governments have attempted to raise agricultural
productivity by increasing access to fertilizers and improved seeds, with
variable success, agricultural mechanization has received less attention.
Despite this urgent need, African crop yields have been largely
stagnant over the past 50 years. Less than 4% of farmland in
sub-Saharan Africa is irrigated. Almost three-quarters of its soils are
degraded due to years of planting crops without replacing nutrients; fertilizer
use is by far the lowest in the world with most farmers unable to afford it.
Decades of research have led to substantially improved
understanding of the nature of food insecurity. A combination of economic
growth and targeted programs resulted in a steady fall (until the food crisis
of 2007/08) in the percentage of the world’s population suffering from under
nutrition (from 20% in 1990/92 to 16% in 2006).
Yet over a billion people still face both chronic and/or
transitory food insecurity due to long-standing problems of inadequate income,
low-productivity in agricultural production and marketing, and related problems
of poor health and absence of clean water.
Assuring adequate food security for such a large share of
the world’s population is increasingly challenging due to continuing resource
degradation driven by a combination of population pressure and outdated
agricultural practices, poorly functioning input markets, rapid urbanization,
increased concerns about food safety, and climate change.
Summary
The size of the food and agribusiness sector is growing
rapidly in Africa and could grow to a trillion-dollar market by 2030. It is
expected that this expanding market opportunity will encourage more of the
large local and international players to go into agriculture-related
businesses. What is important though is that larger companies develop
partnerships with smallholder farmers, as they are the key to unlocking
Africa’s agricultural potential. In addition to making significant contribution
to national socio-economic development, it makes good business sense for big
companies to share access to markets, technology, and knowledge to help
smallholder farmers turn their subsistence farms into profitable businesses.
Food
security occurs when all people, at all times, have access to enough food
to meet their dietary needs. To declare countries “food secure” I look at
a combination of availability, access and utilization.
Mauritius, South Africa, Ghana,
Namibia
and Senegal are
among the top 10 most food-secure countries on the continent. This is attributed
to the use of new crops and agricultural production technologies.
But ultimately the ability to achieve food security depends
on political will and the effectiveness of government and national strategies
in the agricultural and food sector.
Innovation and technology
Though the 2018 rise in food insecurity is disheartening,
some African countries have made progress over the last decade. And there were
some new recent initiatives that deserve a special mention for the precedents
they set, countries recorded improved food production because of modern
technologies provided by governments, aid agencies or entrepreneurs. These
included:
The adoption of improved seed varieties, Modern equipment, and fertilizers
or better practices such as conservation agriculture.
In Ethiopia, for instance, farmers increased wheat yields
by 14% as a result of newer agricultural technologies.
In Rwanda, farmers reported increased
productivity due to solar-powered irrigation technology.
In Nigeria, increased agricultural productivity
was linked to the use of smart and affordable tractors by smallholder
farmers.
And in Kenya, the practice of conservation
agriculture has taken root, resulting in bigger yields. Equally important
are the growing number of innovations in financing. To improve productivity,
and achieve food security, farmers must be able to invest in technology.
But, many African farmers live below the poverty line.
They can rarely borrow from formal financial institutions as they don’t have
collateral. Today, only 6% of total bank credit on the continent goes to
agriculture.
Tanzania addressed this challenge by rolling
out a toolkit that allows farmers to pre-pay for discounted agricultural
inputs using mobile money. Farmers are also provided with customized plans that
guide them on how to maximize crop yields.
New policies
Several African countries have strengthened and launched new
agricultural policies. These will play a key role in improving food security.
For example, policies can lower the cost of agricultural input prices
by introducing subsidies. Or they can allocate resources in a way that
benefit farmers – like road construction for market access.
The Nigerian government deserves mention for some key initiatives it
introduced.
For starters it launched the National Policy on Food and
Nutrition which allocated 92 billion Naira (US $290 million) to the
agricultural sector. Policies were also enacted that gave farmers access to
agricultural inputs and provided them with modern equipment at subsidized
prices. One example is a a fertilizer initiative that delivered over
4 million bags of fertilizers to farmers at affordable prices. This meant more
farmers could buy fertilizer, giving them bigger yields.
In terms of areas of policy areas, 2018 turned out to be a good year
for irrigation.
So, even though the number of food insecure in Africa has
risen this year, discovering effective new technologies and policies that work
is important for the future. This year, these gains were in targeted government
interventions and the adoption of modern agricultural technologies. This
allowed farmers to improve productivity, allowing African countries to make
progress in the quest to attain food security
Only 7% of Africa is irrigated. In Nigeria’s case
the potential irrigable area is 21 million hectares (about the size of
Italy) – with only 200,000 hectares currently irrigated. This year the Nigerian
government completed irrigation projects covering over 33,000 hectares of
land. Things are set to improve even further following a World
Bank announcement that it’s investing US $495 million in irrigation.
Meanwhile in Rwanda the government has made a
commitment to intensify irrigation initiatives to help citizens cope with
climate change. Over 44,000 ha of land would be developed with formal
irrigation infrastructure – that’s about 82,000 football fields.
In Malawi, the government launched a similar
initiative which would put over 100,000 hectares of land across the
country under irrigation – about 187,000 football fields.
Because irrigation improves food security, these
initiatives will continue to play a vital role in moving towards food security.
Analysis
The conventional economic development model maintains that
agriculture is the starting point for wider economic development and poverty
reduction, particularly in countries where the vast majority of the population
works in the agricultural sector. A focus on improving the technology used by
smallholder farmers, who operate on less than two hectares of land and account
for 70 per cent of Sub-Saharan Africa’s workforce, will build the foundation
for further economic development.
Sub-Saharan Africa has been slow to adopt mechanized
agriculture and 60 to 80 percent of the cultivated land is worked
manually, without the use of animals or mechanical tools. That was not always
the case, however, as Africa was once at the forefront of agricultural mechanization
in the developing world. In 1960, for instance, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania each had more tractors
in use than India.
The fact that India now has 100 times more tractors in
use than those three countries combined gives some indication of just how far
Africa has fallen behind. It is also estimated that tractors are only
used on ten per cent of the land currently cultivated in Sub-Saharan Africa,
compared to 20 per cent in East Asia, 35 per cent in South Asia, 50 per cent in
Latin America and the Caribbean, and 60 per cent in the Middle East and North
Africa. The slow uptake of agricultural machinery in Sub-Saharan Africa is one
of the reasons for its slow progress in improving food security.
International development organizations have only recently
begun to rekindle their interest in mechanization after a 30-year focus on
other challenges. Farm mechanization programmes that operated from the 1960s to
the 1980s produced mixed results at best. While in some cases they improved
farm productivity, in many others they failed due to a lack of access to spare
parts and skilled labour.
Mechanization programmes also have the potential to widen
wealth inequality. Large-scale farming operations can afford to purchase and
maintain machinery, but smallholder farmers struggle to do likewise. Medium-
and large-scale farmers, who have landholdings greater than five hectares, are
in the best position to mechanize first. If those farmers offer to rent their
machinery to those who are unable to afford their own, then those disparities
could be reduced.
Alternatively, smallholder farmers might be able to afford
simpler, less expensive machines. Two-wheel tractors, which are cheaper to
purchase and easier to maintain, are seen as a more appropriate tool for
smallholders. These devices, while simple, are an improvement on the hand tools
that are still used by a majority of smallholders.
As mechanization reduces the labour requirements of farm
operations, it could also reduce the number of employment opportunities
available to unskilled labourers. Most of the 30 mechanization programmes
established in Sub-Saharan Africa prior to 1980 failed because of a lack
of access to spare parts, operators and service technicians.
Agricultural mechanization could create new service and
maintenance employment opportunities, if training centres are provided as part
of the mechanization process. Those centres could also provide the transferable
skills necessary for the economic diversification into industry that could
provide jobs for the large youth population that will soon reach
employment age.
There are a number of environmental concerns related to the
adoption of agricultural machines. Mechanized agriculture was a factor in the
creation of the dust bowls that affected the US in the 1930s. In Africa, soils
are susceptible to erosion due to shallow topsoils and heavy rainfall.
Excessive tillage or the improper use of conventional tillage implements (such
as disc or mould board ploughs), can over-expose soils to rain and wind
erosion. Conventional tillage implements are widely used in Sub-Saharan Africa,
but large-scale farms are increasingly adopting conservation
agriculture practices and technologies, which aim to minimize soil
disturbance.
Smallholders are also being encouraged to practice
conservation agriculture. If mechanization is to be successful in the long
term, efforts will need to be made to ensure that the most appropriate tools
and methods are made available to all African farmers.
Land expansion is another environmental concern that needs
to be addressed. Mechanization in the US and Brazil increased farm production
by expanding the amount of natural land converted to crop. On the other hand, mechanization
could reduce the need to clear new land for agriculture as already existing
cropland could be made more productive.
China`s Influence towards securing food security in Africa
Chinese companies are the main suppliers of agricultural
machinery in Sub-Saharan Africa and they are more likely to receive state
support in exporting their equipment than companies based elsewhere. Indian
tractor manufacturers, however, also see the region as a desirable export
market and aim to significantly increase their presence there.
The involvement of China in African agricultural development
has led to the idea that Beijing aims to exploit the continent for its own
self-interest. That notion has some validity, but not in the way that is often
articulated. Claims that China has taken control of large amounts of
agricultural land (up to six million hectares, or one per cent of all the
farmland in Africa), have contributed to the notion of Africa as China’s
“second continent”. Those claims have been vastly overstated, however, and it
is more likely that China has only acquired about four per cent of
that amount.
It is questionable
how much influence it gains from that trade. China sees African agricultural mechanization
as a way to generate business opportunities for Chinese companies and
sell Chinese-made products into new markets, rather than as an opportunity to
improve Chinese food security through the exploitation of African land.
Officials from the Food and Agriculture Organization also see Chinese
technology transfers as beneficial, stating that the introduction of small
machines from China has been one of the main drivers of African agricultural
development.
The Forum on
China-Africa Co-operation (FOCAC), which is held every three years, aims to
strengthen the Sino-African relationship and has also highlighted agriculture’s
centrality to the Sino-Africa relationship. At the most recent FOCAC meeting, President Xi Jinping of recent stated that
China would offer billion of dollars to Africa. Those funds would be used to
fund a variety of projects but, in terms of agriculture, he promised that:
President Xi Jinping said that china will support Africa in
achieving general food security by 2030, work with Africa to formulate and
implement a program of action to promote China-Africa cooperation on
agricultural modernization. They will implement 50 agricultural assistance
programs, provide RMB 1 billion of emergency humanitarian food assistance to
African countries affected by natural disasters, send 500 senior agriculture
experts to Africa, and train young researchers in agri-science and
entrepreneurs in agri-business.
There was some hostility to that announcement aired on
Chinese social media. One critic, quoted in the Financial
Times, stated that ‘China is a poor country as well’ before asking,
‘Is there any country that can provide China with $60 billion in aid?’
Criticism was so widespread that an article was printed in the Global
Times, a media outlet that is ideologically aligned with the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP), which argued that detractors of the CCP’s Africa policy
are being influenced by ‘Western forces’:
The West has been putting the cart before the horse when it
comes to its Africa policy. It emphasizes political governance yet overlooks
industrialization. Western NGOs are very active in Africa, but what the
continent needs most is transportation lines, power plants and manufacturing
industries. China-Africa cooperation has created a new way of cooperating with
equality, mutual benefits and fruitful results. It made the West, which always
wants to exercise leadership in Africa but always fails in doing so, feel
uncomfortable. It is thus natural for some Western forces to use their
advantage in shaping public opinion to make up for their disadvantaged position
in economic collaboration with Africa.
It goes on to directly rebuke those Chinese citizens that
question the CCP’s foreign policy, reinforcing the notion that international
engagement is vital to China’s long-term grand strategy: Chinese people should
also be aware that major powers must fulfill their obligations. Otherwise they
can hardly stay where they are for long, not to mention going forward. It’s a
petty mind-set to think that it is immoral to aid foreign countries because
there are still poor people in China. It can hardly guide the nation’s grand
practice.
China is likely to continue to be the main supplier of
agricultural equipment in Sub-Saharan Africa. While it also provides technical
assistance to regional farmers, it is unclear whether that will help to
ameliorate the social, economic, environmental and political challenges that
affect food security in the region. Developed countries, which have experience
in overcoming those challenges, should also be engaged in the region’s
agricultural development.
Yet the carbon footprint of African smallholder farming is
low, and problems of eutrophication and other forms of agricultural
pollution are less prevalent than elsewhere. Sustainable intensification
is sometimes viewed as a Trojan horse for the implantation of large-scale,
industrial agriculture – increasing yields through a dramatic increase in the
use of fertilizers and pesticides while paying lip service to the environment
and local farming conditions. As such, sustainable intensification polarizes
opinion.
But the term needs to be understood in a more balanced
way and reinterpreted as relevant to the realities of smallholder agriculture
and the need for strengthening food security. Agricultural intensification can
take many forms, including current systems, many of which are not sustainable.
With increasing pressure on natural resources and the impact of climate change,
intensification must be made more sustainable. It can follow many paths, such
as reducing reliance on fertilizers and pesticides; generating lower greenhouse
gas emissions, and contributing to the maintenance of critical public goods,
such as biodiversity and clean water.
Sustainable intensification is achievable for African
smallholder farmers, and builds on many of their traditional practices. It
includes: "micro-dosing" by which smallholder farmers use the cap of
a drinks bottle to measure out small amounts of fertilizers, boosting yields significantly
while keeping costs down for farmers and reducing the risk of fertilizer runoff
into waterways; combining mixed field and tree crops, such as nitrogen-fixing
varieties; harvesting and managing scarce water for supplementary irrigation;
and promoting regeneration of diverse natural species in common lands.
But sustainable intensification requires more than just
inputs and technology – it demands greater co-operation and organization in
rural areas. For instance, supporting village "grain banks" run by
local farmer associations helps smallholders to protect their grain. Farmers
deposit grain and the bank keeps it protected against pests and diseases, so
that farmers can access it as needed or sell later in the season when prices
are typically higher. This type of network is supported by the Kenya
Agricultural Commodity Exchange, a private-sector firm that provides farmers
with prices and other market intelligence by SMS text.
While many parts of the world have experienced large
increases in crop yields over the past 50 years, production has not always been
intensified sustainably. Intensification is often associated with the ills of
modern agriculture seen in the west – over-use of chemicals and fertilizer,
pollution of rivers and water bodies, monocrops and biodiversity deserts.
But African agriculture does not need to follow suit.
Helping African farmers to increase their production and incomes while
safeguarding the environment – in short, sustainable intensification – offers a
balanced and practical way forward.
It is time to place sustainable intensification at the heart
of African agriculture, and ensure that development goals deliver on the
agenda. Sustainable intensification involves producing more crops, better
nutrition and higher rural incomes from the same set of inputs – such as land,
water, credit and knowledge – while reducing environmental impacts on a
sustained basis.
Governments, in partnership with the private sector and
NGOs, are all called upon to recognize the huge potential for sustainable
intensification as a driver of development – in terms of food security, better
nutrition and more resilient rural livelihoods.
Finally, Africa is potentially
an agricultural powerhouse. The continent has 60 percent of the world’s
uncultivated arable land and could grow enough food to meet its own needs and
export surpluses. Yet hundreds of millions go hungry. Despite recent progress,
Africa’s farmers, most of whom are smallholders who underperform.
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development clearly asserts
a collective responsibility to fully achieve the Sustainable Development Goal
2, which aims to end hunger and all forms of malnutrition by the year 2030. It
also commits to the provision of universal access to safe, nutritious and
sufficient food all year round.
This will require sustainable food production systems,
resilient agricultural practices, equal access to land, technology and markets,
and international cooperation on investments in infrastructure and technology
to boost agricultural productivity. In doing so, the global community needs to
focus on Africa, where the prevalence of hunger is more acute, high in
proportion, and the recovery potential is low due to a lack of resources and
related endowments.
Furthermore, one of the main
causes of food insecurity in Africa, in addition to regional/domestic
production constraints and resource scarcity, is the lack of cost-effective and
timely availability of food products from international markets. Imports are
costly due to the high cost of trade. Higher trade and transaction costs stem
from cumbersome regulatory procedures, both at the export and import level, as
well as from the uncertainty at destination border points due to a number of
non-tariff measures (NTMs) that may require a last-minute application of
various standards and, at times, be nearly impossible to comply with by the
exporters and importers.
A key lesson learned from examining the experiences of
countries is that hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition are complex problems
that cannot be resolved by a single stakeholder or sector. Addressing the
immediate and underlying causes of hunger will require a variety of actions
across a range of sectors, including agricultural production and productivity,
rural development, forestry, fisheries, social protection and trade and
markets.
We also need to bring together leaders from the private
sector, civil society and the political sphere to trigger cooperation that
benefits farmers and the general population #FoodSecurity
#SustainableProduction #ZeroHunger #SustainableDevelopment #SDG2
#AfricaFoodSecurity
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