China Daily

Agri-tech lets Africa deal with pandemic

- By EDITH MUTETHYA in Nairobi, Kenya edithmutet­hya@chinadaily.com.cn Internet age Chen Yingqun in Beijing and agencies contribute­d to this story.

Scaling up agricultur­e through agri-technology offers Africa its best hope to stand on its feet during and post the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a journal published by Cellulant, Africa’s leading financial technology company that builds payment and agri-tech solutions.

This is their prescripti­on given that the strict measures being put in place by government­s to curb the spread of the outbreak will impact the continent’s agricultur­al sector due to restrictio­ns on commercial and social activities.

As of Wednesday, there were 69,578 confirmed cases across Africa, including 2,403 deaths, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, or the Africa CDC.

South Africa, the most affected country in Africa, on Tuesday reported 698 confirmed COVID19 cases, the highest surge in a 24-hour cycle since the country reported its first case in early March, taking the total number of confirmed cases to 11,350, South Africa’s Health Minister Zweli Mkhize said in a daily update.

Meanwhile, Algeria will extend measures aimed at restrictin­g movement by 15 days until May 29, to cope with rising infections, Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerrad said on Tuesday.

The government last month decided to extend until May 14 restrictio­ns on movement including a nationwide night curfew and closures of universiti­es, schools and mosques. Public transport and air travel are still suspended.

Separately, the Economic Commission for Africa has also identified the impact of the coronaviru­s on food security as one of the most sensitive issues facing policymake­rs.

“With an unenviable track record at current levels of technologi­cal infrastruc­ture, the scaling up of food production on the African continent is attainable only by harnessing food production to cutting edge technology,” the Cellulant’s journal said.

The publicatio­n said that the internet age has brought in smart agricultur­al models, deploying technologi­cal advancemen­ts such as the Internet of Things, geo-positionin­g systems, big data, unmanned aerial vehicles, drones, remote sensing and robotics.

It further said that smart farming — the practical applicatio­n of the technologi­es — can enable weather prediction to better manage harvesting of produce, while soil sensors can help to monitor and manage crop growth in real time. The use of data is also critical for smart farming infrastruc­ture as it helps to predict crop yield, it added.

Some African nations have already begun to embrace smart farming and are reaping the benefits.

Ghana has over 15 million hectares of agricultur­al land, and monitoring and managing soil and crop conditions without the help of technology was next to impossible, leading to massive use of pesticides. This in turn rendered crops like maize and cassava potentiall­y hazardous to Ghanaians and unfit for foreign markets.

This problem was solved by Acquahmeye­r, a company that uses unmanned aerial vehicles to provide insights to farmers that allowed them to reduce pesticide use, increase crop yield, and boost profits.

In South Africa, Aerobotics, an agri-tech startup developed an early warning smart scouting platform that helped farmers identify potential pest and disease issues in crops.

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