Stabroek News

Eco-farming can solve hunger and...

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use of costly chemical fertiliser­s and pesticides, which damage the environmen­t and human health, experts said at a threeday agroecolog­y conference, which began Tuesday.

Yet less than 30 countries globally, and only two in Africa - Ivory Coast and Mauritius - have laws and policies that support eco-farming, the FAO said.

“We have three big challenges to manage - climate change, food security, and the connection between agricultur­e, forestry, economy and employment,” said Stephane Le Foll, a French parliament­arian and former agricultur­e minister.

The solution, he said, is ecological agricultur­e, which replaces chemical fertiliser­s with natural methods, such as planting trees amid crops and rotating foods grown to improve soils and deter pests.

Le Foll is vice-president of the “4 per 1000” initiative, which seeks to increase carbon held in agricultur­al soils by 4 percent a year to combat global warming.

Soil naturally absorbs carbon from the atmosphere through a process known as sequestrat­ion which not only reduce harmful greenhouse gases but also creates more fertile soil.

Fertile soils produce more food, which would feed more people and farming that is profitable could resolve unemployme­nt, Le Foll added.

Agroecolog­y has proven to work in Africa, where farmers are already grappling with degraded soils and unpredicta­ble weather, said Million Belay, cofounder of the advocacy group Alliance for Food Sovereignt­y in Africa (AFSA).

In northern Ethiopia, eco-farming techniques provided better yields than chemical fertiliser­s in five critical crops, including barley and maize, a project by the Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, an Addis Ababa-based charity, found.

But donors’ focus on commercial agricultur­e in Africa is holding agroecolog­y back, Belay said.

“Philanthro­capitalist­s like Bill Gates and others come in with a lot of money to promote commercial agricultur­e,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, referring to wealthy businesspe­ople who invest in ventures with a social goal.

 ??  ?? Members of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force load some of the counterfei­t items that were seized at two Chinese stores on Princess Street in downtown Kingston yesterday.
Members of the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force load some of the counterfei­t items that were seized at two Chinese stores on Princess Street in downtown Kingston yesterday.

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