Africa holds key to feeding 9bn people by 2050, says AfDB chief

Africa holds the key to feeding the nine billion people that will inhabit this planet by 2050, the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Akinwumi Adesina has said. The 2017 World Food Prize Laureate was speaking during his Norman Borlaug Lecture delivered on World Food Day in Iowa, U.S. on Monday.

Tuesday, October 17, 2017
Dr Akinwumi Adesina speaks during a past event in Kigali. (File)

Africa holds the key to feeding the nine billion people that will inhabit this planet by 2050, the President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Akinwumi Adesina has said.

The 2017 World Food Prize Laureate was speaking during his Norman Borlaug Lecture delivered on World Food Day in Iowa, U.S. on Monday.

He also called for land tax for unused agricultural land or underutilised agricultural land to provide incentives for faster commercialisation of agriculture and unlocking the sector’s potential in Africa.

In a lecture titled, "Betting on Africa to Feed the World,” delivered before a large international audience at Iowa State University in Des Moines,  Adesina stressed why, more than ever before, the world must help Africa to rapidly modernise its agriculture and unlock its full potential.

"Africa sits on 65% of the uncultivated arable land left in the world, so what Africa does with agriculture will determine the future of food in the world,” he said. "African farmers need more than a helping hand. They need a policy lift,” Adesina said.

 He also highlighted how the challenge of addressing global food security is greatest in Africa where close to 300 million are malnourished, according to a statement.

Africa is also the only region of the world where the proportion of the population that is food insecure has increased, he said.

 The AfDB president paid tribute to Dr Norman Borlaug, whom the lecture series was named after, and recalled how Africa was the last frontier for the late Borlaug.

Borlaug, the Founder of the World Food Prize, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for a lifetime of work to feed a hungry world.

Adesina stressed that despite the progress globally in food production (including in Africa, Latin America and Asia), the world still has 700 million people languishing in extreme poverty.

This, he added, includes 800 million with chronic hunger, 2 billion people with micronutrient deficiency, and 150 million children under 5 years of age who are suffering from stunting.

He described the challenge of feeding the world as immense, with need for rapid increases in global food, feed and biofuel production to feed a global population of 9 billion people by 2050.

"If Dr Borlaug alone could feed one billion people, we definitely can feed 800 million people globally and we definitely can feed 300 million Africans. Dr. Borlaug would be disappointed if we couldn’t and with all technologies and innovations, from gene revolution to ICT revolution, at our disposal, we won’t be able to face him and say we didn’t.”

Adesina decried the current situation, where Africa spends US $35 billion annually on food imports, describing it as unacceptable. By his estimates, if the current trend continues, Africa is estimated to spend US$110 billion by 2030 on food imports.

 "There is, therefore, absolutely no reason for Africa to be a food-importing region. Africa has huge potential in agriculture, but, as Dr Borlaug used to say, nobody eats potential!”

Unlocking that potential must start with the savannas of Africa which cover "a mind-boggling 600 million hectares of which 400 million hectares are cultivable,” Adesina said.

Africa’s savannas, he said, are better than the savannas of Brazil, because their soils are not acidic and, therefore, do not need liming, which had to be done at massive scales in Brazil.

"Yet, while the savannas of Brazil feed the world, those of Africa cannot even feed the farmers there,” he lamented. He further highlighted how technologies, innovations, research and development, mechanisation, modernisation of agriculture, policy support and massive investments in infrastructure made the difference to turn the savannas of Brazil and those of Northern Thailand into a food powerhouse.

 To transform its agriculture, Africa needs to make a decision to develop a new agrarian systems− one that combines smallholder farmers with a new dynamic generation of medium and large commercial farmers.

He also canvassed land tenure systems that make it easier to get access to land, and for smallholder farmers and their communities to have secured land rights.

A top priority must be to mechanise agriculture in Africa, he added.

Over 1,200 people from more than 65 countries will address cutting-edge issues related to global food security and nutrition at the 2017 Borlaug Dialogue International Symposium, October 18-20, 2017.

 

editorial@newtimes.co.rw