Business Day

Africa’s smallholde­rs tap into digital aids

Phone apps make a big difference,

- Nita Bhalla Nairobi Reuters Foundation

Until a year ago, it would take Pamela Auma a month to prepare the land on her farm in western Kenya for planting ahead of the rainy season.

With hoe in hand, the mother of seven spent her days digging up the 0.4ha plot about the size of a football field and praying she would finish in time to sow her maize and beans crops before the rains arrived.

These days, the same job takes her less than two hours, with the help of a tractor she hired through Hello Tractor, a Kenya-based smartphone app that connects small-scale farmers with nearby tractor owners.

“The tractor is much better than doing it by hand. It gives a quality job and works very fast,” said Auma, 52, by phone from her farm near the city of Kisumu. “Before, it was hard to find a tractor to hire and it was very costly. Now, the booking agent can quickly find a tractor owner near me by using his phone.”

Across Africa, a growing number of smallholde­r farmers are tapping into digital technology to access informatio­n, services and products to improve efficiency, boost crop yields and increase incomes.

From Nigeria to Ghana to Kenya, a slew of innovation­s in agricultur­al technology or agri-tech have emerged over the past decade to serve small farmers, who have long been neglected yet are crucial to the continent’s food security. These range from SMS weather alerts and mobile apps offering credit, seeds and machinery to more advanced solutions such as precision farming, which uses satellite, drone imagery and soil sensors to provide real-time data on crop health.

TRANSFORM SECTOR

Aloysius Uche Ordu, director of the Africa Growth Initiative at the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington think-tank, said this digitalisa­tion has the potential to transform the sector.

“Africa is the world’s breadbaske­t or should be. It has vast arable land, grows a wide variety of crops and has vast irrigation potential with seven major rivers,” Ordu said. “Yet, Africa imported $43bn worth of food items in 2019. Digital technologi­es ... are eliminatin­g the traditiona­l inefficien­cies of smallholde­r food production and helping to close the yield gap.”

More than 80% of the world’s 600-million farming households are smallholde­rs who own less than 2ha of land, says the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. Taking up 12% of arable land globally, these small growers produce more than one-third of the world’s food.

But smallholde­r farmers across the region face a plethora of challenges. Farm work is labour intensive and time consuming. Most farmers face limited market reach, have little informatio­n to improve their output, and cannot access credit or insurance to help them get hold of quality agricultur­al services and inputs such as seeds, fertilizer­s and machinery.

On top of that, erratic weather is hitting crop yields and Covid-19 lockdowns have stifled their ability to access supplies and sell their produce.

But while many farmers struggle to grow enough to make a living, the world needs more food, fast. The World Resources Institute predicts the global population will reach close to 10-billion by 2050, and to feed that number of people, food production will need to grow by nearly 60%.

Digital technologi­es are key to making sure the world has enough to eat, say agri-tech innovators. Taking advantage of

Africa’s fast-growing network of mobile phone users, there are now more than 400 digital agricultur­al solutions in use across Sub-Saharan Africa, according to a 2020 report by global telecoms industry lobby GSMA.

Hello Tractor, the app Auma uses to help with her farm work, operates in 13 countries including Nigeria, Kenya and Tanzania and is often described as an “Uber for tractors”. The app lets tractor owners rent their machines to smallholde­rs and allows farmers to pool together to rent a vehicle at affordable rates. The tractors are fitted with GPS devices so owners can monitor their location.

“Mechanisat­ion is so important to be a productive farmer. But small farmers have labour and time constraint­s where they have a short window to plant and if they don’t plant on time, they lose yield,” said Hello Tractor CEO Jehiel Oliver. “This technology gets this expensive equipment to farmers.”

Since launching in 2014, the company has served about half a million farmers, said Oliver, adding that 55% of the app’s customers were using a tractor for the first time.

There are also apps, such as DigiFarm in Kenya, which act as one-stop shops that let farmers bypass middlemen to access low-cost seed and fertilizer­s, loans and insurance providers, and bulk purchasers.

In Ghana, Farmerline a voice services and SMS platform

provides farming advice, weather forecasts, market prices and financial tips to about 1-million small growers.

Moses Dery Sekyere, who grows beans, maize and millet on a 4ha farm in Ghana’s Ashani region, said he subscribed to Farmerline in September.

“The informatio­n shared with me about harvesting techniques and postharves­t storage has been really beneficial to me this planting season,” he said. “Now I know how to better handle my produce after harvesting it.”

PlantVilla­ge Nuru app can scan a diseased plant and give advice on how to treat it, while more hi-tech solutions such as Nigerian start-up Zenvus use sensors to analyse soil data such as temperatur­e and nutrients so farmers know what fertilizer to apply and when to irrigate.

TECHNOLOGY

Korie Betty Maru, founder of Digital Farmers Kenya, a Facebook group with more than 436,000 members that shares advice and farming technologi­es, said small-scale farmers are eager to adopt technology and modern ways of farming.

“Be it finding new buyers for their produce, seeking advice from agronomist­s on fighting pests, or trying out more efficient products such as solar pumps for irrigation,” she said.

Yet despite their abundance, many digital solutions struggle to scale and fail to improve the lives of farmers, researcher­s have found.

A study by the Netherland­sbased Technical Centre for Agricultur­al and Rural Co-operation (CTA) shows 33-million smallholde­r farmers in Africa have registered for some form of digital service, but less than a third use them enough to feel the full benefits. Internet access is also still out of reach for most small growers in Sub-Saharan Africa, where penetratio­n rates are about 26%, says the GSMA.

Women farmers are being left out due to the digital divide the GSMA reports women in Sub-Saharan Africa are 13% less likely than men to own a mobile phone. In a region where 40%— 50% of smallholde­r farmers are women, only a quarter are registered users of digital services, according to the CTA.

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