Sunday, 24 September 2017

“Non-State Actors Strategizes to Boost Agriculture in the Continent”

The Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Program Non-State Actors Coalition (CNC) members were speaking in Kigali, Rwanda, during their first General Assembly, which spanned from September 13 to 14, 2017 held under the theme: Mobilizing Civil Agency for Africa’s Agricultural Transformation.

Non-Stakeholders at the General Assembly also harped on creating more awareness on the importance of investing in high value nutritive foods and agricultural commodities in order to promote nutrition and food security on the continent, facilitate dialogue among Farmers’ organizations, private business entities and Africa’s academic and research institutions, deliberating on options leading to developing of continental action plan to ending hunger and malnutrition and share best practices and innovations to women’s empowerment, among others. 

The CAADP Non-State Actors Coalition (CNC) is a Continental Coalition that was established in 2014 with the sole aim of satisfying the need for increased and more structured engagement of Non-State Actors (NSAs) in the implementation processes of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Program (CAADP). Accordingly, the CNC was founded on three very well-focused cardinal objectives: creating awareness on CAADP among NSAs for their improved involvement in CAADP implementation at all levels; advocating for policy reforms towards effective CAADP implementation in line with the Malabo Declaration, and; strengthening coordination among NSAs in the CAADP process.  
Towards ensuring the realization of CNC’s noble objectives, several strategies and frameworks have been designed, and are progressively being deployed to facilitate NSA engagement in the CAADP process. The progress made by the CNC in articulating Non-State Actors voice in CAADP implementation processes at all levels cannot be overemphasized. In fact, despite its current formative stage of development, the CNC has progressively asserted itself as a veritable partner in the CAADP process, by increasingly developing programs that complement the efforts made by the African Union Commission, the NEPAD Agency, Member States and Development Partners. As part of this, the coalition has been working across the continent to help deepen the impact of CAADP implementation through different programs and initiatives.
It has done that through sensitization and capacity building activities to create awareness on CAADP, progressively instituting national Platforms Program at the country level, convening Pre-Meetings to the yearly Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Partnership Platform (PP) meetings as well as participating in relevant decision-making and consultative forums with other CAADP Partners. These activities have effectively strengthened coordination between the coalition and other CAADP stakeholders, especially the AUC/ NPCA towards deepening NSAs perspectives in the CAADP implementation process.


TANDONG CALISTUS JONG

Kigali, Rwanda





   

Saturday, 22 July 2017

"African Forest Stakeholders Want Sustainable Forest Management"


African Forest stakeholders have pressed for the sustainable management of the continent’s forest.
       The African Forest actors were speaking in Accra, Ghana, during a five day regional workshop organized by the African Forest Forum, AFF, in collaboration with Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, FORIG.
     The workshop, which spanned from July 10 to 14, 2017 held under the theme: “Sharing knowledge and experiences on public and private sector development in forestry and response to climate change and trans-boundary forestry issues”.
   The African Forest Forum is a pan-African non-governmental organization with its headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya.
      It is an association of individuals who share the quest for and commitment to the sustainable management, use and conservation of the forest and tree resources of Africa for the socio- economic wellbeing of its people and for the stability and improvement of its environment.
    The purpose of AFF is to provide a platform and create an enabling environment for independent and objective analysis, advocacy and advice on relevant policy and technical issues pertaining to achieving sustainable management, use and conservation of Africa’s forest and tree resources as part of efforts to reduce poverty, promote gender equality, and economic and social development.
Through all its programmes and activities, AFF seeks to promote the empowerment of all marginalized groups particularly women who continue to be vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and whose representation, priorities and needs are rarely adequately addressed in the forestry sector. AFF with funding from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) and Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) is implementing two projects namely “African Forests, People and Climate Change” and “Strengthening Sustainable Forest Management in Africa” respectively.
     Both projects seek to generate and share knowledge and information through partnerships in ways that will provide inputs into policy options and capacity building efforts in order to improve forest management in a manner that better addresses poverty eradication and environmental protection in Africa. Notably, the public and private sector development in forest products industry and role of African forestry private sector in response to climate change remains critical. 
     In this regard more information and knowledge is needed to enable African governments design policies and programmes that would support and strengthen linkages and partnership between public and private sector in forestry.
     There is also need for information to guide African countries to promote integrated and cooperative management of trans-boundary forests, water resources, pests and disease surveillance and international trade in forest products. It is on this understanding that AFF commissioned 21 national studies on public and private sector development in forest products industry in Africa, covering the following countries: Niger,   Burkina Faso,  Senegal,  Nigeria, Ghana,  Kenya,  South  Africa,  Sudan,  Cameroon,  the  Democratic  Republic of   Congo,   Gabon, Uganda,   Mozambique,   Tanzania,   Zambia,   Zimbabwe,   Madagascar,   Rwanda, Chad, Côte d’Ivoire,   and the   Republic of Congo. The AFF workshop brought together over 80 participants drawn from private and public forest sector; governments, non-governmental organizations,  research,  academia,  media  institutions, youth and women based organizations on forestry and climate change in sub-Saharan Africa.

By TANDONG CALISTUS JONG in Accra, Ghana




Tuesday, 20 June 2017

African Leaders Exhorted for Stronger impact on agriculture!



African leaders have been called upon to assure more accountability on agriculture. The call was made at the 13th Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Partnership Platform (PP) meeting organized by the African Union Commission (AUC) and  the NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency (NPCA) from May 31 –June 2, 2017 in Kampala, Uganda under the theme: ‘Strengthening Mutual Accountability to Achieve CAADP/Malabo Goals and Targets’. The meeting called for stronger accountability on continental commitments on agriculture,  and for the realization of the AU Malabo commitments on agriculture through mutual accountability for results and impact. Officially opening the 13th Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) Partnership Platform meeting, Ugandan State Minister for Agriculture, Hon. Christopher Kibanzanga assured the meeting, Uganda was committed to mutual accountability saying, “We are here for accountability, we are implementing the Malabo Declaration commitments and we are focused on agriculture to transform our country to a middle income economy. Speaking at the opening session, the AUC’s Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, H.E Josefa Sacko, said “With the awareness that the Malabo Declaration sounded a call for action towards delivery of results and impact, we should, jointly and as individual actors and as Member States, respond to this call through a focus on implementation of concrete actions on the ground and report on progress attained.” The AU Business Plan for CAADP-Malabo implementation, the AU Agribusiness Strategy and Country Agribusiness Partnership Framework, were further launched; as tools to support Member States to mobilize private sector investments in country agriculture, proposing the right coordination mechanisms of the key stakeholders and accounting for actions.
Commissioner Sacko urged all stakeholders to support AU Members States to produce credible biennial review reports, on the basis of which the continental report will be produced, emphasizing that, “Renewed partnerships built on mutual accountability will help governments, the private sector, civil society, farmers and farmers organizations as well as development partners to deliver on results and impact for a transformed Agriculture to reach the targets set by the Malabo Declaration. In addition, the AUC’s Department of Rural Economy and Agriculture (DREA) Director , Dr. Godfrey Bahiigwa emphasized that, The continental biennial report will be based on validated country reports by all stakeholders, including governments, civil society, the private sector and development partners. The theme of this year’s CAADP PP speaks volumes. We are noting with satisfaction that for the first time in history, African leaders have set themselves up for checks and balances to be instituted in Africa’s collective agricultural development efforts, through the Malabo Declaration. Indeed, calling for a Biennial Review mechanism to be put in place to track performance and report progress, both by countries and collectively as a Continent, gives us cause for hope for a better future of governance in Africa,” said Mrs. Estherine Fotabong, NEPAD Director of Programmes. Giving a keynote presentation during the opening session, Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), underscored the role of agriculture in driving inclusive economic growth. “Agriculture is Africa’s surest path to prosperity. Achieving meaningful agriculture transformation requires strong coordination between partners in a countries-led process,” she said. “AGRA is delighted to work with the AUC and the NEPAD Agency in supporting countries to meet their Malabo Declaration commitments which are key to the success of the transformation push,” she added.
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the world population will reach 9.1 billion by 2050, and to feed that number of people, global food production will need to grow by 70%. For Africa, which is projected to be home to about 2 billion people by then, farm productivity must accelerate at a faster rate than the global average to avoid continued mass hunger. African governments and other stakeholders have been urged to encourage the youth to embrace agriculture and to let them understand that they could make money from the sector and its value-chains. It should be recalled that the Malabo Declaration requests the African Union Commission (AUC) and the NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency (NPCA) in collaboration with partner institutions to:   develop mechanisms that will enhance Africa’s capacity for knowledge and data generation and management, to strengthen evidence based planning and implementation; institutionalize a system for peer review that encourages good performance on achievement of progress made in implementing the provisions of the Declaration and recognize, biennially, exemplary performance through awards;   conduct, on a biennial basis (beginning in 2017), an Agricultural Review Process and, furthermore, launch a process of reporting on progress made, to the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government with the Inaugural Biennial Report expected at the January 2018 Ordinary Session of the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government. The 13th CAADP PP, brought together over 400 leaders from African Governments, including parliamentarians from AU Member States, leaders from international organizations, development partners, private agribusiness firms, farmers, NGOs and civil society organizations.

BY TANDONG CALISTUS JONG
Kampala, Uganda.



Friday, 30 October 2015


The ADFNS provides a platform at national, regional and continental levels to share experiences, knowledge and mutual learning, as well as measure progress in assuring food and nutrition security for all by governments and multi-stakeholder partners. More than ever before, it is time to move from business as usual to undertake sustained and effective action to end hunger and malnutrition on the continent. 

Wednesday, 28 October 2015

"The main purpose of the ADFNS is to serve as a rallying point in intensifying commitments at all levels to address the challenges of food and nutrition insecurity and malnutrition in Africa".

Tuesday, 21 October 2014

The Climate for Development in Africa (ClimDev-Africa) Special Fund Launched to Fight Climate Change.


The Climate for Development in Africa (ClimDev-Africa) Special Fund Launched to Fight Climate Change.

This new initiative will help finance efforts to harness information to fight climate change in Africa. The Africa Development Bank (AfDB) has launched a fund drive worth €33 million to be used for building regional capacities in climate information gathering and dissemination in order to overcome challenges posed by climate change in Africa.
The ClimDev-Africa special fund, launched on the sidelines of CCDA-IV in the city of Marrakech-Morocco, will be managed by the Climate for Development in Africa (ClimDev-Africa) Programme, an initiative of the African Union Commission (AUC), the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and AfDB.
Public and private sector institutions and organizations in Africa are now expected to submit proposals to ClimDev-Africa to enable them access the financing which is intended to build viable, reliable and regular climate change information sources in Africa.
During the launching in Marrakech on the 09th of October 2014, the coordinator for special initiative at the AfDB, Mr. Ken Johm, expressed his optimism that despite the fact that the fund may not be enough to meet the entirety of Africa’s climate information needs, it will be demonstrative enough that others can also benefit and learn from such experiences. Climate Change has become a major drive for poverty in our African counties, especially among indigenous smallholder farmers who are increasingly becoming vulnerable with about 37% of the continent at risk desertification.
The AfDB has committed to support countries adapt to the negative effects of climate change, ensure food security and support good land, water and forestry management good practices. Climate information services enable better integration of the water, energy and land nexus, which are critical along the entire agricultural commodity value chain, Says Dr. Fatima Denton, coordinator of the Africa Climate Policy Center (ACPC).
Our deepest conviction is that climate change remains a double-edged sword, she said. It constitutes the greatest challenge of our times, but it is also Africa’s greatest opportunity to widen out ripples of prosperity across our mother continent. ClimDev-Africa is entrusted with a mandate to improve climate information services in support of African development agenda. Consolidating the potential for agriculture, using climate information services, will have a multiplier effect in catering for our youth, shared prosperity, and providing food, water and energy security, observed Dr. Denton.

“By Tandong CALISTUS Jong in  Marrakech”

Monday, 24 March 2014

THE DANGERS OF AFLATOXINS IN MAIZE, GROUNDNUTS UNDER REVIEW.



“Aflatoxins constitutes a significant threat to food and economic security”

By TandongCalistus Jong and MononoYawa,

It undermines poverty eradication in Africa. It is a major cause of post-harvest loss that further constrains the quantum of food reaching our markets and households across the continent.
It poses a major public health challenge to consumers all over the continent and can result in foregone revenues and profit from domestic and regional commerce and international trade.

What are aflatoxins
Aflatoxin is a poison naturally produced by strains of the fungus Aspergillusflavus and related species. Although aflatoxin contamination poses a global problem, the impact of the problem is higher in tropical climatic regions, between 40° North and 40° South of the equator, including the entire African continent. Aflatoxin contamination commonly occurs in maize and groundnut and crops of regional importance in West Africa such as melon seed and yams. According to IITA, contamination frequency in the tune of 10 – 60% of maize and groundnuts is encountered.

Human risks with aflatoxin
Aflatoxin can damage the liver and may lead to liver cancer. Evidence abounds that aflatoxin ingestion is frequent through contaminated foodstuffs and is one of the major etiological factors in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in China and sub-Saharan Africa. About 25% cases of up to 600,000 new HCC cases reported annually in the world may be attributable to aflatoxin exposure (Liu and Wu, 2010). Aflatoxin is also associated with stunting in children and immune-suppression. Studies carried out in Benin and Togo (Gong et. al., 2002, 2003, 2004), and also the Gambia (Turner et. al., 2003, 2007) have shown that elevated levels of aflatoxin in blood are associated with stunting and children being underweight for their age. Exposure to potentially harmful levels of aflatoxins begins in the womb and continues through breastfeeding, through baby weaning foods and beyond. Children under 5 remain particularly vulnerable to aflatoxin exposure significantly hindering children's growth and development while damaging their immunity. In several ECOWAS member countries (e.g., Ghana, The Gambia, Benin, Togo), more than 95% mothers and children have aflatoxin adducts in blood demonstrating high exposure to aflatoxins. In Sierra Leone, nearly 90% mothers had aflatoxin in breast milk, showing that not only the mothers but also the babies are at risk.
A review of aflatoxin contamination in foods in ECOWAS member states documents levels well above the internationally recommended maximum limits. For instance, studies found that 40 to 90% groundnut samples in farmers' stores in Mali had unsafe levels of aflatoxin. The economic impact of aflatoxin extends beyond crop production and utilization and significantly hampers the profitability of the livestock industry; for instance 62% of commercial poultry feed sold in Nigerian markets were found to be unsafe, greatly impacting productivity, increasing mortality and contaminating the gizzards of chickens commonly consumed as a local delicacy.

Regulation on Aflatoxin
Because of the serious food safety risks, human exposure to aflatoxins is limited by regulations. Regulatory limits for aflatoxins exist in only 15 African countries and the regulations vary widely among these countries. The maximum concentrations of aflatoxin permitted in food for humans are less than 20 ppb in the U.S., and less than 4 ppb in the EU. Contamination therefore presents a barrier to cross-border trade and economic growth as the presence of excessive aflatoxin levels causes grain exports to be rejected by importing countries. For example, Senegal and Nigeria, among the major exporters of groundnut in the 1970s, have seen their market share dwindle to almost a standstill due to difficulty of meeting aflatoxin regulations. If all countries were to adopt EU standards on aflatoxins, then global trade would decline by $3 billion (Dohlman, 2008). According to WHO (2011), aflatoxin contamination leads to 64% reduction in food quality in Africa.

Seeking solutions
The aflatoxin problem is so complex that it straddles the agriculture and food security, trade and health sectors. Cognisant of these, in March 2011 at the 7th CAADP Partnership Platform, the African Union Commission was urged to oversee the establishment of a Continental SPS Working Group to mainstream sanitary/phytosanitary matters in the CAADP framework and establish an Africa-led Partnership for Aflatoxin Control.  Through this call, the Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa (PACA) was established.
PACA aims to provide consistent coordination and coherent leadership to the continental efforts on aflatoxin control. It aims at supporting adoption of proven solutions, and identify new ones, that will work to mitigate the impacts of aflatoxin on food security and agriculture, trade, and health in Africa. Many actors are involved in developing comprehensive solutions to control aflatoxin along the value chain, from crop production through processing and food preparation to consumption. Many measures can be taken to reduce aflatoxin exposure to local consumers and improve opportunities to sell aflatoxin-safe crops to markets, but some options need to be supported by appropriate policy and regulatory actions. It is expected that comprehensive and feasible solutions being developed for the African context will also be useful for other regions where aflatoxin is a problem. Combating aflatoxin will also contribute to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and PACA will look for ways to contribute to the MDGs and the post 2015 development agenda.
Through the leadership of the African Union Commission (AUC), and with participation from African and other governments, Regional Economic Communities, the private sector, farmers’ organizations, and civil society leaders from across Africa, PACA is establishing a comprehensive, Africa-wide approach to mitigate the agriculture and food security, trade, and health impacts of aflatoxin. In this context, regional workshops will further sensitize key stakeholders about comprehensive solutions to control aflatoxin that are appropriate to the region based on priorities identified by stakeholders themselves.
All this was reviewed during a three day workshop that held in Accra – Ghana last November 2013  jointly organized by African Union, ECOWAS, Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa (PACA), FARA, CORAF, USAID, IITA, and World Bank.