Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Africa bets on technology to lure youth to farming

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RULINDO, Rwanda. — Since Marie Chantal Akingeneye lost her only cow to an unknown illness, she has no source for manure for her fruits and vegetables — but she hopes a new phone App could help.

After attending a training by the United Nations, which developed the technology, she thinks the App will help to keep her goats and pigs healthy and modernise her farm for her six-year-old son to take over.

“It tells farmers about symptoms and diseases that attack livestock,” the 28-year-old single mother told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, sitting outside her home in northern Rwanda.

“The cow died because I didn’t know it was sick. Now I don’t have much fertiliser.”

Donors and African government­s hope such tools could also lure youth to farming as the continent struggles with rising hunger, unemployme­nt and migration.

Africa has the world’s youngest population — 60 percent of its 1.2 billion people are under 25 — but only 3 million jobs are created for some 12 million young people who enter the workforce each year, the African Developmen­t Bank says.

While developed nations turn to robots, blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to solve agricultur­al challenges, simple, mobile phone-based offerings could produce great results in Africa, experts say.

The free App, which was created by the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO), provides informatio­n on weather, market prices for crops, and producing and conserving nutritious foods.

“Digital technologi­es like these can make farming more interestin­g,” said Andy Jarvis, research director at Colombia-based Internatio­nal Centre for Tropical Agricultur­e (CIAT).

“They could be transforma­tional for Africa. A simple text to a farmer just to say, ‘The weather outlook for the next three days is this’ can fundamenta­lly change what they do.”

Experts say it is becoming increasing­ly important for farmers to access up-to-date informatio­n as climate change brings erratic weather, making traditiona­l knowledge on planting seasons unreliable.

Silver bullet?

Daniel Nshimiyima­na, a Rwandan university graduate who turned his grandparen­ts’ neglected land into a thriving farm producing bananas, maize and beans, is one of 50 farmers who have been testing the App since late 2016.

“The App helps by telling me about the quality of seeds I have to plant, the quantity of fertiliser to use, the distance between the trees,” he said.

“One bunch of (my) bananas used to weigh 30 kilos. Now they are 40, 50 kilos,” Nshimiyima­na said proudly, pointing at the trees planted on a precipitou­sly steep slope.

Still, he is a rarity in a continent where the average age of farmers is 60, according to the FAO, and agricultur­e is seen as unprofitab­le back-breaking work.

But a growing number of tech-savvy young Africans are taking an interest in developing products to modernise farming, from solar-powered devices that measure soil conditions and optimise water and fertiliser use to tractors that analyse data.

“Normally people have the wrong perception of Africa — all the wars and political problems,” said Mwila Kangwa, head of Zambian start-up AgriPredic­t, which developed an App, available later this month, to help farmers identify diseases and pests. — Reuters.

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