I
wrote an opinion piece today to emphasize how important is for the
international community to focus on the development challenges of Africa. This
should be one of the top priorities in the global agenda for the next two or
three decades. And the key areas of intervention have to be, as I see them, the
following: governance, energy development and agricultural change. Resources,
both from Africa and from elsewhere, should go first to these three sectors.
That will be the only way to address the compound problems of extreme poverty,
population growth and chaotic urbanisation.
Showing posts with label agriculture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label agriculture. Show all posts
Sunday, 2 November 2014
Sunday, 11 May 2014
Africa´s Green Revolution
Africa needs a Green Revolution: a major
transformation of the agricultural sector. The benefits of enabling this are
multiple. Not only can this contribute to addressing the fuel deficit by offering
a means to diversify and localize the production of fuel. It will also enhance
food security and offers a wide range of livelihood opportunities to move poor
subsistence-based farmers and their families out of poverty and into greater
economic security. Here too, then, there is a need for a radical re-think:
looking at agriculture as a potentially profitable business opportunity, not
simply as an aid or development challenge that is only oriented to poverty
mitigation.
Saturday, 10 May 2014
Agricultural transformation in Africa
The
Africa Progress Report 2014 has just been published and I recommend its
reading. It is the flagship annual publication of the Geneva-based Africa
Progress Panel (APP), a non-governmental institution that is led by former UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan. APP is a key advocate for Africa´s inclusive and
sustainable development.
This
year´s report is about food and nutrition security. It is about farming and
fishing with the poor at the centre of the policies.
And
I quote from the report:
“Agriculture
must be at the heart that transformation. Most Africans, including the vast
majority of Africa’s poor, continue to live and work in rural areas,
principally as smallholder farmers. In the absence of a flourishing
agricultural sector, the majority of Africans will be cut adrift from the
rising tide of prosperity.”
Saturday, 13 July 2013
Alentejo, a Province in Southern Portugal
As I drove over the vast expanses of land that make Alentejo,
the Southern Province of Portugal, I thought that all those, all over the
world, that are interested in investing in commercial agriculture, food
production, biofuels, exotic fruits, should consider visiting the region. There
is so much farming land available there, just waiting for capital investment
and technology. And the weather, on top of it, is not bad at all.
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