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| | WARDA
News Release
Cotonou,
Benin
12 May 2005
$35
Million AfDB-ARI NERICA Dissemination Project in West Africa Takes Off
The
regional launching of the African
Development Bank (AfDB)-funded New Rice for Africa (NERICA) dissemination
project took place during an official ceremony on 12 May 2005 in Accra, Ghana.
The overall coordination of the project will be carried out by the African
Rice Initiative (ARI), which is hosted by the Africa Rice Center (WARDA).
The launching marks the culmination of months of preparatory work by ARI and
the project pilot countries in keeping with the pledge made by AfDB in 2003
during the signing of the $35 million grant and loan agreement to support
NERICA dissemination in seven West African countries over 5 years.
The grant and loan came into force in February 2005 on fulfilment of the
Bank’s conditions by all the pilot countries. The conditions included the
establishment of a steering committee, national coordination units and
stakeholder platforms and the appointment of national coordinators in the
pilot countries.
This regional launching of the project in Accra is not only significant for
Ghana, but also for The Gambia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone, which comprise the
English-speaking pilot countries of this project. The regional launching of
the project for the French-speaking pilot countries—Benin, Guinea and
Mali—will be done on 19 May 2005 in Conakry, Guinea.
“The launching of the AfDB-ARI project is especially rewarding for WARDA,
which developed NERICA, because it testifies to the farsightedness of the
Center in creating ARI to serve as a focused channel for coordinated NERICA
dissemination efforts across sub-Saharan Africa” stated Dr Kanayo F. Nwanze,
WARDA Director General, in his message for the project launching ceremony. He
added that the project also dovetails with NEPAD’s
endorsement of NERICA as one of the “best practices worth scaling up”
across the sub-continent.
Dr Nwanze thanked all the partners, including the governments of the pilot
countries and the ARI Regional and National Coordination Units for their
efforts to make the project launching possible. “AfDB’s support to the
project demonstrates its strong commitment to food security and poverty
reduction in the most impoverished region in the world,” he said.
“We are equally indebted to the Rockefeller Foundation, which has championed
the cause of ARI right from the beginning, as well as Japan, UNDP and Sasakawa
Global 2000, which have been its staunch supporters and partners.”
The objective of the project is to help small-scale producers in the pilot
countries to improve rice production and incomes through the dissemination of
NERICA varieties and complementary technology from WARDA. About 80% of the
targeted beneficiaries of the project are the rural poor, mostly women.
The project estimates that about 33 000 farm families will be involved in
participatory variety selection (PVS) strategy to accelerate NERICA
dissemination. About 400 000 ha of additional land is expected to be under
NERICA cultivation by the 5th year of the project. The rice import bill of the
seven countries is expected to reduce by about US$100 million.
According to WARDA economists, the demand for rice in West and Central Africa
(WCA), the rice belt of Africa, is growing at the rate of 6% per
annum—faster than anywhere else in the world. The growth is largely the
result of urbanization, which is growing at the rate of 3.5% per year in
Africa—again the fastest in the world—and changing consumer preferences.
As domestic rice production cannot meet this rising demand, rice imports in
the sub-region have increased eight-fold to 4 million t per year since the
1960s, at an annual cost of over US$1 billion.
“The launching of the AfDB-ARI NERICA project is thus very timely,”
commented Dr Inoussa Akintayo, ARI Coordinator. The NERICA advantage consists
in its combined characteristics of: higher yields, earlier maturity,
resistance to local stresses and good taste.
Under farmers’ conditions, NERICA varieties raise the yield of upland rice
from less than 1.0 to more than 1.5 t per ha. With minimal application of
fertilizer, the yield levels can go up to 3 t per ha. NERICA matures 30 to 50
days earlier than other rice varieties grown in the region—a trait, which is
particularly valuable for rural women to bridge the gap of the 'hungry
season', when food stocks from the previous harvest have been exhausted and
the current season's crop is not yet mature.
Thus, NERICA varieties offer opportunities for sustainable intensification of
upland rice production systems, increased household incomes for farmers and
increased market share of locally grown rice. In recognition of the immense
potential of NERICA for food security and poverty alleviation in sub-Saharan
Africa, Dr Monty Jones, popularly called The Father of NERICA, was selected as
the co-laureate of the 2004 World Food Prize.
Upland NERICAs are planted on more than 100 000 ha across Africa, including
about 70 000 ha in Guinea and more than 10 000 ha in Uganda. “NERICA
dissemination can be more effectively accelerated through the AfDB-ARI NERICA
project,” Dr Akintayo explained. The project will build on the success of
the World Bank-funded partnership-based NERICA project that was initiated in
Guinea in the late 90s.
It will adopt participatory approaches adapted to Africa such as PVS and
community-based seed production systems (CBSS) that were central to the
success of the World Bank-funded NERICA project. It will have four major
components: technology transfer, production support, capacity building, and
project coordination.
Since seed shortage is the biggest bottleneck in NERICA dissemination, the
project plans to mount a major effort on seed production. The project will
also address the lack of rice processing technology in the region.
The launching of the AfDB-ARI project thus sets the stage for large-scale
coordinated dissemination of the NERICAs in West Africa. Dr Nwanze expressed
his hope that similar projects could be launched in Central and Eastern
Africa, where the demand for NERICA is growing fast. He announced that WARDA,
in close association with its national partners, has recently achieved another
scientific breakthrough – the development of NERICAs for lowlands. The new
varieties are already gaining popularity among farmers. Four lowland NERICA
varieties were released in Burkina Faso and two in Mali in early 2005.
Dr Nwanze cautioned, however, that technologies such as upland and lowland
NERICAs, alone cannot bring about an agricultural revolution in sub-Saharan
Africa. These should be complemented by political and social stability;
favorable and consistent agricultural policies; removal of unfair subsidies;
better infrastructure; active involvement of the private sector; price
incentives for quality products; access of farmers, particularly women, to
credit; massive promotion of local products; competitive local and regional
markets; and political commitment at the highest level.
“Only then will we be able to capture the full benefits of breakthroughs
such as upland and lowland NERICAs,” Dr Nwanze concluded.
| About the Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
Africa
Rice Center (WARDA) is an autonomous intergovernmental research
association of African member states. WARDA is also one of the 15
international agricultural research Centers supported by the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
WARDA’s mission is to contribute to poverty alleviation and food
security in Africa, through research, development and partnership
activities aimed at increasing the productivity and profitability of the
rice sector in ways that ensure the sustainability of the farming
environment.
WARDA hosts the African
Rice Initiative (ARI), the Regional
Rice Research and Development Network for West and Central Africa (ROCARIZ),
and the Inland
Valley Consortium (IVC). It also supports the Coordination Unit of
the Eastern and Central African Rice Research Network (ECARRN), based in
Tanzania.
Since January 2005, WARDA has been
working out of the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)-Benin station in Cotonou,
having relocated from its headquarters in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire,
because of the Ivoirian crisis. WARDA has regional research stations
near St Louis, Senegal and at IITA in Ibadan, Nigeria. |
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