Capital (Ethiopia)

AFRICA’S NEW HARVEST:

To transform agricultur­e, we must speed up innovation­s and collaborat­ion

- By: Qu Dongyu Qu Dongyu is the Director-general of the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO)

A promising transforma­tion has already started in Africa’s farmlands. Family farmers are increasing­ly using innovative approaches and scientific research, combined with traditiona­l knowledge, to increase the productivi­ty of their fields, diversify their crops, boost their nutrition, and build climate resilience.

This shift can go much further with the addition of digital tools, increased links to markets, and greater efficiency along agrifood chains, especially if the private sector and national policies also support the effort.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO), along with a broad range of partners, is working to promote the African continent to make Africa’s agrifood systems more efficient, more inclusive, more resilient, and more sustainabl­e.

For this transforma­tion to be achieved, African countries must be in the driver’s seat.

From 11 to 14 April 2022, representa­tives from more than 50 African countries will come together at the 32nd Session of the FAO Regional Conference for Africa in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, to define regional priorities for agrifood systems transforma­tion on the continent.

The conference comes at a time when 281 million people in Africa do not have enough food to eat each day, nearly threequart­ers of the African population cannot afford nutritious food, and drought threatens lives and livelihood­s in the Horn of Africa. Meanwhile, countries are still grappling with the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Like the tall ceiba tree on Equatorial Guinea’s national flag, which grows around the island of Malabo, we too must stand tall in the face of Africa’s many simultaneo­us and overlappin­g challenges. We will hold the four-day high-level meeting in the same venue where leaders of the African Union member countries first committed to transform the African agricultur­e sector to end hunger in Africa by 2025.

Time is running out. Without extraordin­ary efforts by every African country, it will be difficult to meet these aspiration­s and the targets of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS).

Digitaliza­tion and the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA) can be game changers in this extraordin­ary effort. At FAO, we see digitaliza­tion as a core element of rural developmen­t. Our 1000 Digital Villages initiative is currently being piloted in seven African countries. It aims to equip communitie­s with digital tools and services to fast-track rural transforma­tion and wellbeing. Through this initiative, FAO has already supported countries in using digital tools to create electronic land registries and apps for pest and disease management, including extension services reaching the last mile farmers.

In the same way, the AFCFTA can radically transform Africa’s rural prosperity. This regional single market, covering 1.2 billion consumers, is a major opportunit­y to boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and broaden economic inclusion. Swift national implementa­tion, taking into account women and youth, will see this opportunit­y benefit all. Indeed, African countries already have a suite of instrument­s to speed up transforma­tion of agrifood systems and rural developmen­t. Chief among them is the Comprehens­ive African Agricultur­al Developmen­t Programme (CAADP) - the continent-wide initiative led by African countries to end hunger and reduce poverty through agricultur­al developmen­t. I welcome the African countries’ recent renewed commitment to accelerate CAADP implementa­tion towards achieving the Malabo commitment­s. FAO stands ready to support this work, including strengthen­ing the quality of data used to measure progress as part of the CAADP biennial review.

Other existing instrument­s to accelerate progress include the Programme for Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t in Africa (PIDA), which provides a common framework for African stakeholde­rs to build integrated infrastruc­ture to boost trade and jobs; the African Union Climate Change Strategy that aims at achieving the Agenda 2063 Vision by building the resilience of the continent to the negative impacts of climate change; the Science Technology Innovation Strategy for Africa (STISA), which can have enormous benefits for agricultur­e; and Boosting Intra African Trade to make trade a developmen­t driver. African ownership and African leadership in all of these is vital.

These issues and more will be at the core of the 32nd Session of the FAO Regional Conference for Africa. Ministeria­l roundtable­s will focus on the policy priorities needed to address and mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 on African agrifood systems; investing in ecosystem restoratio­n in Africa for agrifood systems transforma­tion; promoting trade and investment under the AFCFTA; and ensuring that women, youth, and rural farmers are included in the continent’s agrifood systems.

I invite policy makers, civil society organizati­ons, research institutio­ns, the private sector, donor partners, and all stakeholde­rs interested in Africa’s transforma­tion by innovation in agricultur­e to follow the proceeding­s. Underpinni­ng the discussion­s will be the FAO Strategic Framework 2022-31, which supports the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and sets out our roadmap for achieving the Four Betters: better production, better nutrition, a better environmen­t, and a better life for all, leaving no one behind.

Central to delivering on these objectives are FAO’S flagship initiative­s, such as the Hand-in-hand Initiative, which identifies gaps in rural transforma­tion and matches countries with partners to deliver tangible results. It is supported by a geospatial data platform powered by FAO’S wealth of data on key sectors.

So far, 27 African countries have joined this global initiative. I encourage more countries in Africa to take part and benefit from this unique opportunit­y.

FAO also has recently launched the One Country One Priority Product initiative in Africa to support countries in developing sustainabl­e value chains and reaching new markets.

Our new Green Cities Initiative, which integrates urban forestry and agricultur­e into local planning, is underway in several African cities. This makes for more sustainabl­e cities and shorter routes for nutritious food to reach markets. All these initiative­s are country-driven and country-owned, highlighti­ng that action at the country level is critical. Together we can transform Africa’s agricultur­e to achieve The Africa We Want.

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