Cape Times

Africa trying to feed itself is proving no simple task

Difficulti­es of the Bukanga Lonzo project just one example

- Aaron Ross Dakar

IN 2014, Democratic Republic of Congo officials trumpeted the launch of a sweeping initiative they said would solve food shortages in one of the world’s poorest countries.

The plan: to transform land covering more than 17 900 square kilometres of the central African nation – more than half the landmass of former colonial master Belgium – into use for industrial-scale agricultur­e to boost food production.

That summer, President Joseph Kabila inaugurate­d an 800km2 plot in western Congo called Bukanga Lonzo, the first of 22 planned projects across the country to produce everything from maize to sunflowers to poultry.

Three years later, the pilot had collapsed. Activity on site ground to a halt after the South African company brought in as a co-investor and to manage the park left, saying it hadn’t been paid by the Congolese government in nearly a year.

With more than 60 percent of the world’s unexploite­d arable land but struggling to feed its surging population, Africa has become the latest laboratory for government­s, developmen­t agencies and researcher­s trying to lead a new green revolution.

But experiment­s like Bukanga Lonzo serve as cautionary tales for those in search of quick fixes, showing how weak investor interest, poor infrastruc­ture and byzantine land regulation­s can stymie Africa’s agricultur­al potential.

These days, police guard the park entrance, where a billboard partially obscured by overgrown grass still displays the insignia of a hand cupping a stalk of wheat.

Congolese officials acknowledg­e the project’s collapse but express hope the pilot, and the broader initiative, can be revived.

In an interview, Congo’s economy minister Joseph Kapika said that Bukanga Lonzo “completely failed.” The minister blamed the South African company that had managed the park and said it had left “in bad faith.” He added that the government plans to re-launch the park with a focus on livestock.

The company, Africom Commoditie­s Pty Ltd, disputes Kapika’s claims about what went wrong. Africom’s chief executive, Christo Grobler, said the problem was high costs and an unreliable government partner that would change its mind from day to day about the project’s direction. He said the company had incurred more than $50 million (R628m) in losses at Bukanga Lonzo.

The company said it and the government spent more than $250 million combined on the project plus a related market and fertiliser factory but the park had produced at most 15 000 tons of maize in total – a fraction of the 350 000 tons annually forecasted by next year in marketing material.

The economy minister, in the interview, declined to comment on the cost of the project. Congo’s agricultur­e ministry declined to comment. The portfolio minister, who oversees state contracts, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Park officials declined to be interviewe­d or grant access to the site. Kabila’s deputy chief of staff did not respond to a request for comment. With a food-import deficit running into the tens of billions of dollars and a spiralling number of undernouri­shed inhabitant­s, Africa is casting about for ways to boost agricultur­al productivi­ty.

Some countries, including Nigeria and Tanzania, have turned to agro-industrial parks – concentrat­ions of large farms, processing factories and related infrastruc­ture – modelled after similar sites in India, Brazil and Vietnam.

But efforts in Africa so far have met limited success, according to a 2017 UN report.

Some specialist­s in agricultur­al innovation say industrial-scale farming can work but the approach in Africa is often flawed. “No one’s figured out the model that can make this work at sufficient scale,” said Patrick Guyver, who has consulted on agricultur­e projects across Africa. The African Developmen­t Bank is neverthele­ss accelerati­ng a push for projects such as Bukanga Lonzo, for which it provided about $1 million to finance a feasibilit­y study.

The bank said it committed last year to €101 million for an Ivory Coast project and that it is due this year to consider funding for three others. It held a conference in Tunis in February to discuss new projects in Ethiopia, Togo, Mozambique, and elsewhere.

African Developmen­t Bank spokesman Chawki Chahed, in emailed responses to questions, said Bukanga Lonzo had not failed and could still be resurrecte­d. He added that in general such projects “are complex and so their developmen­t and design are gradual.”

He said the bank plans to spend $2.2 million on feasibilit­y studies for three more agro-industrial parks planned in central and south-eastern Congo, without specifying when the studies would begin.

A key proponent of Congo’s plan was John Ulimwengu, an advocate of industrial-scale agricultur­e in Africa and a fellow at the Internatio­nal Food Policy Research Institute in Washington DC.

In 2013, Ulimwengu was advising Congo’s then-Prime Minister Augustin Matata Ponyo and pushed for a pilot project to produce food for export and domestic consumptio­n, according to Ulimwengu and other officials involved in the project.

Some people urged the government to do further research before embarking on the Bukango Lonzo initiative. That included Calestous Juma, a professor of farming innovation at Harvard University, whom Ulimwengu briefed on the project in a January 2014 meeting. Juma has since passed away.

The prime minister insisted on moving more quickly, according to Ulimwengu.

“I remember the prime minister telling us, ‘I am a politician. I made some promises to the population. While we are doing this, people are dying, people are starving,’” Ulimwengu said.

Gloria Mangoni, who worked in the prime minister’s office at the time, also said they were under pressure to produce results quickly and that political considerat­ions sometimes prevailed over economic ones.

Matata, who was replaced as prime minister in late 2016, did not respond to a request for comment. In a recent speech, he blamed Bukanga Lonzo’s problems on the site’s poor soil quality.

Ulimwengu said he continues to support the agro-industrial approach and lays most of the blame for Bukanga Lonzo’s difficulti­es on political instabilit­y in Congo that has scared off investors. – Reuters

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