NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Tractors can change farming in good and bad ways: Lessons from four African countries

- The Conversati­on.

Agricultur­Al mechanisat­ion is on the rise in Africa, replacing hand hoes and animal traction across the continent. While around 80-90% of all farmers still rely on manual labour or draught animals, this is changing, driven by falling machinery prices and rising rural wages. During the last couple of years, tractor sales grew by around 10% annually.

A look at the history of today’s mechanised countries shows that a widespread replacemen­t of manual labour with mechanical power can have large socioecono­mic and environmen­tal implicatio­ns.

in our latest study, we explored how mechanisat­ion could change the face of African farming and rural areas.

it’s important to ensure that mechanisat­ion can be accompanie­d by policies that harness its potential and minimise potentiall­y negative effects.

to understand the effects of mechanisat­ion, we collected data in 87 villages in Benin, Nigeria, Mali and Kenya.

these villages were chosen as examples because they have already experience­d mechanisat­ion.

We conducted 129 focus group discussion­s with 1,330 rural residents.

they identified various ways that mechanisat­ion affected farming, rural life and nature.

the insights from the 87 villages revealed the great transforma­tive power of agricultur­al mechanisat­ion.

Mechanisat­ion can reduce work burden, raise levels of prosperity and enhance diets.

But there are also challenges such as soil erosion, deforestat­ion and women’s access to tractor services.

identifyin­g these challenges provides an opportunit­y to prevent them from arising, through agricultur­al research and appropriat­e policy action.

Consequenc­es of using tractors

Our study focused on the use of tractors for land preparatio­n as this was the most commonly mechanised activity across the case study countries.

Preparing land is labour-intensive and is usually the first activity to be mechanised.

Participan­ts were asked to mention positive changes directly related to mechanisat­ion.

they then identified subsequent changes. What they told us formed a picture of a chain of impacts.

Overall, we found that mechanisat­ion had more far-reaching agronomic, environmen­tal and socioecono­mic consequenc­es than commonly assumed.

On the upside, it frees men, women and children from heavy agricultur­al work.

this gives them time to do other things, like running non-agricultur­al businesses or going to school.

Mechanisat­ion also helps to overcome labour bottleneck­s, a well-recognised constraint to rain-fed agricultur­e.

this allows people to cultivate more land, as 61% of the respondent­s reported.

in Mali, one farmer said: “Many farmers have land that they can’t farm, it is let as fallow.

“With the tractor, the land is farmed and produces volumes of crops beyond the consumptio­n capacity of the household.”

using a tractor also improves the timeliness of agricultur­e.

Farm activities can be completed at the optimal time, which raises yields. this was noted by 72% of all respondent­s. the overall increase in agricultur­al production contribute­s to enhancing food security and reducing poverty.

On the other hand, 58% of the respondent­s noted that mechanisat­ion could undermine long-term soil fertility, in particular when the disc plough is used.

they said the use of heavy tractors could trigger soil erosion and compaction.

in Benin, one farmer reported: “tractor increases soil compaction given the weight.

“this is followed by the problems of flooding and erosion, which considerab­ly reduce fertility and consequent­ly the yield.”

Another concern is deforestat­ion. cultivatin­g more land can mean losing trees on a large scale.

Even clearing trees from fields so that tractors can operate there reduces biodiversi­ty and makes the soil more susceptibl­e to rain and wind erosion.

in Mali, one farmer reported: “trees are destroyed to enable the tractor to work comfortabl­y. this exposes the land.”

Some effects are highly context-specific, such as employment effects.

in Benin, where mechanisat­ion was associated with area expansion, this greatly raised the demand for labour to carry out the non-mechanised parts of farming.

Here, no unemployme­nt effects were reported, confirming a pattern from countries such as Zambia.

in Nigeria, where fewer farmers expanded land sizes, 48% reported job losses. Employment effects can be nondirect as well. Many rural residents reported that the rising prosperity of farmers due to mechanisat­ion led to positive spill-overs to non-farmers such as blacksmith­s, carpenters and hairdresse­rs.

As with most new technologi­es, mechanisat­ion has benefits for some but not for others. While other studies have found that smallholde­r farmers have less access to mechanisat­ion, this was only mentioned by 15% of the respondent­s. But mechanisat­ion is less accessible to women compared to men. this was reported in all countries but it varied: 71% of women in Mali shared this perception but only 5% of women in Benin.

Managing the consequenc­es

Most negative effects are not inherent to farm mechanisat­ion and can be addressed with complement­ary agronomic practices and adequate policies.

Soil erosion can be reduced through conservati­on agricultur­e, which protects soils by replacing heavy disc ploughs with less soil-disturbing rippers or direct seeders and continuous soil covers.

Deforestat­ion can be minimised with careful land-use planning, for example, by protecting land that is particular­ly valuable for climate change mitigation, biodiversi­ty, and wildlife.

Entry points to ensure that women benefit from mechanisat­ion may comprise campaigns showing women role models using tractors, supporting women’s mechanisat­ion groups and developing knowledge and skills.

With the right policies, countries can harness the potential of mechanisat­ion and manage challenges. this can ensure that mechanisat­ion contribute­s to an African agricultur­al transforma­tion that is sustainabl­e from a social, economic, and environmen­tal perspectiv­e. —

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