The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Smart investment­s in technology can beef up Africa’s economy

is no shortage THERE of technologi­cal innovation­s designed to boost animal agricultur­e in Africa.

- Noble Banadda

These range from GPS tracking systems, which identify and trace pastoralis­ts’ herds, to livestock vaccine SMS services that alert farmers to disease outbreaks.

But to unlock the economic potential of the sector as demand for meat and milk swells threefold towards 2050, countries must invest in the critical areas that will improve quality across the whole value chain.

That is increasing productivi­ty and quality from the breeding of the animal throughout the production process to the end product. This includes safe storage, handling and sale.

My native Uganda offers some useful lessons from its use of smart investment­s in technology and farmer organisati­on. These have made it the only East African country that is self-sufficient in milk.

In recent years, some private sector players in Uganda have invested in testing systems to detect aflatoxin in animal feeds. The goal is to prevent milk and meat contaminat­ion. Others have developed refrigerat­ion units that are powered with biogas from manure.

Both are among the innovation­s that improve the quality of the final product.

As highlighte­d by a new report from the Malabo Montpellie­r Panel on which I sit, the same can be achieved elsewhere. It can also benefit other livestock commoditie­s, to give Africa food sovereignt­y across animal-sourced foods and greater access to internatio­nal markets.

The report makes 11 recommenda­tions for Africa’s livestock sector. These range from technologi­cal innovation­s and supportive policies to addressing trade barriers and challenges specific to each commodity.

African nations must be strategic in prioritisi­ng the infrastruc­ture that will make the most difference to quality and productivi­ty.

The first priority is to increase consumer awareness around food safety, nutrition and sustainabi­lity to kick-start demand for better quality products.

Partly as a response to European consumer expectatio­ns around quality and safety, for example, Morocco developed a new system for animal identifica­tion and traceabili­ty in 2015.

Livestock can be identified using electronic tags that communicat­e with the national database via mobile phone networks.

This increases transparen­cy and traceabili­ty.

It also promotes Moroccan animal products on internatio­nal markets such as the European Union.

The second priority is then to direct technology towards opportunit­ies to open up market access.

To unlock trade means investing in improved animal health, processing operations, storage and distributi­on. Meeting regional and internatio­nal standards for food safety and quality is a vital goal.

Africa currently contribute­s 2,8 percent of the global meat market, which translates to 14 million tonnes.

The continent produces just over 10 percent of the world’s milk.

There are a number of barriers to increasing this production and gaining greater market share.

They include limited availabili­ty of quality animal feed, access to affordable energy needed in producing and processing livestock, and limited infrastruc­ture, particular­ly in the last mile.

With meat and milk being perishable goods, innovation in the cold chain and sustainabl­e energy supplies will help strengthen the sector.

For example, an East African initiative which centralise­d milk quality testing and storage in chillers prior to sale, increased yields six fold within five years.

The volume of milk supplied to the 30km catchment area rose to three million litres a month.

This increased income per smallholde­r household by more than 160 percent in Uganda, 120 percent in Kenya, and almost 65 percent in Rwanda.

The success of such projects in turn drives demand for continued innovation, such as solar-powered cold chains or interventi­ons that protect other resources like water and grasslands.

Finally, countries also need to prioritise policies that support new technologi­es across the livestock sector.

To transform its milk production sector, Uganda privatised the state-owned processing company Dairy Corporatio­n as well as creating a Dairy Developmen­t Authority.

The Dairy Industry Act of 1998 empowered the authority to enforce milk hygiene standards and quality controls. As a result, traders were licensed to meet public health and milk quality standards.

This encouraged the modernisat­ion of the sector through the expansion of pasteurisa­tion plants and processing infrastruc­ture as well as processing of high value products.

Certainly, the gains have trickled down to the farmers in better farm gate prices.

As the Malabo Montpellie­r Panel points out, many of the tools needed to tap into the potential of Africa’s livestock sector exist already. But with limited resources, they must be deployed smartly to improve the entire value chain.

Scaling up innovation at critical points will unlock new opportunit­ies and help ensure animal agricultur­e keeps pace with a rising demand from a growing population.

Noble Banadda is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Agricultur­al and Bio systems Engineerin­g at Makerere University.

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