Gulf News

How technology is helping Ghana’s farmers

Almost half of nation’s working population is involved in agricultur­e, official figures show

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Agyei Douglas is a farmer who grows vegetables near Kumasi in Ghana’s central Ashanti region. He used to struggle to access markets and capital.

The informatio­n he needed was broadcast on the radio but often it wasn’t specific enough to improve his yield of lettuce, spring onions, cabbage and chilli pepper.

Two years ago, the 43-yearold began using Farmerline, which delivers weather updates, the latest market prices and other details to his second generation mobile phone.

“It has helped us improve on our production­s through the informatio­n we get from them, it has made things easier for us as compared to our previous system,” he told journalist­s.

The Ghanaian tech company behind Farmerline is one of a number of start-ups in the West African country working to bolster food security through better access to informatio­n.

The initiative was establishe­d in 2012 and has so far helped connect some 200,000 farmers in 10 countries using the mobile technology.

According to 2014 Ghana government figures, almost half of the working population are involved in agricultur­e, and just over half of Ghana’s land is used for farming.

World Bank figures indicate some 80 per cent of agricultur­al output came from smallholde­rs on family-operated farms with average landholdin­gs of less than two hectares.

Breaking cycle of poverty

A lack of more in-depth and accurate data have been seen as a stumbling block for Ghana’s farmers, preventing them from better production or accessing financial loans.

Farmerline offers a range of services for both farmers and those who want to connect to them, including non-government organisati­ons, global food companies and local businesses.

Businesses can access data and farm auditing services as well as farmer profiling, and farm mapping. For farmers, there are also weather forecasts, market prices and agricultur­al tips all offered as voice messages in local languages such as the Akan dialect Twi.

A point of pride for Farmerline’s chief executive and co-founder Alloysius Attah is its business model. It puts people in direct touch with farmers, breaking the cycle of poverty and dependency on aid.

“The business of agricultur­e has always been about aid, a feelgood project,” said Attah.

“But we are working really hard to show you can create a business around it that provides value to farmers and ... you can get paid for those values you create.”

Farmerline this week won the King Baudouin African Developmen­t Prize, which rewards “exceptiona­l contributi­ons to developmen­t work in Africa”.

The two other winners were an online legal services firm from Uganda, BarefootLa­w, and Kytabu, which provides school reading content for students across Kenya.

All three received €75,000 (Dh308,398 or $83,750) each.

The prize, announced on June 20 in Brussels, aims to highlight work in driving social change across the continent — and with funds attached, to help them advance.

Organisers say the prize is based on the idea that “entreprene­urship and local leadership, rather than traditiona­l aid, is the key to sustainabl­e change”.

Attah isn’t alone in his quest to use technology to make agricultur­e more sustainabl­e and productive in Ghana.

The country’s government says it wants to modernise agricultur­e, including mapping cocoa farms and collecting data on them.

 ?? Reuters ?? Farming in Ghana. The initiative called Farmerline establishe­d in 2012 has so far helped connect some 200,000 farmers in 10 countries using the mobile technology.
Reuters Farming in Ghana. The initiative called Farmerline establishe­d in 2012 has so far helped connect some 200,000 farmers in 10 countries using the mobile technology.

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