WARDA
News Release
Cotonou,
Benin
25 May 2005
Enhancing
West Africa’s Rice Competitiveness:
Common Strategy Developed to Improve Impact of Policy Research
International
and national experts in rice policy research in West Africa have developed a
common strategy to improve the impact of policy research and institutional
arrangements on the competitiveness of the rice sector in the region. The
experts representing Burkina Faso, Mali, Nigeria, Niger, the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and the Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
participated recently in an extensive brainstorming meeting in Cotonou, Benin.
The key elements of the strategy include:
-
The
formation of a rice policy research and advocacy platform at the regional
level—based on strong national advocacy groups—that can serve as a
channel for transmitting policies to promote the rice sector in the
region. It was recommended that WARDA should nurture and coordinate the
formation of this platform.
-
The
development and implementation of a common agenda for rice policy research
to provide necessary information for the formulation of national and
regional policies
-
The
development of multi-country project proposals on rice policy research
based on regional research priorities identified by the participants and
the joint sourcing of funds to carry out the projects
Rice
has become a commodity of strategic significance in Africa, where it is grown
and consumed in about 40 countries. 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.
This growth in demand for rice 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, West African countries have become heavily dependent
on imports of this staple food. 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.
Smallholder rice farmers in the region face unfair competition from subsidized
rice imports and have to compete in markets that are more demanding in terms
of product quality. They are faced with such constraints as poor
infrastructure and lack of access to markets, inputs and credits, processing
technology and market information.
The policy experts agreed that unless favorable and consistent policies and
effective institutional arrangements relating to rice are developed and
implemented across the region, local rice would never become competitive. They
discussed such issues as:
-
Why
is the domestic rice production in the region not competitive?
-
How
can policy research help?
-
Should
there be a common agricultural and trade policy for the region?
-
How
can such an agenda be implemented? What will be the cost and benefits of
the common agenda?
Priority
research themes on rice policy were identified and a network of scientists on
agricultural policies in the sub-region was established. The participants
agreed on the need for a multinational study on the effects of existing policy
and institutional arrangements on rice competitiveness in West Africa. They
recommended that WARDA should assist in building the national capacity of its
partners in West Africa relating to policy research with inputs from the
participants.
“The outputs of this important meeting will contribute to the organization
of a regional conference on Policies and Strategies for Promoting Rice
Production and Food Security in Sub-Saharan Africa, which is planned to be
held this year by WARDA,” stated Dr Patrick Kormawa, WARDA Policy Economist.
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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