Mauritania_food

South-South Cooperation: Africa turn to Asia for experience sharing opportunities on rice cultivation

Through South-South Cooperation, sharing these lessons can help African countries avoid similar hurdles and related costs.

Rice growing experts from Thailand and Viet Nam have visited the United Republic of Tanzania this week with the aim of exploring opportunities for collaboration  with African countries to share knowledge and experiences for  boosting rice productivity and production. Demand for rice consumption is growing in Africa, particularly in urban areas, and level of domestic rice production is not keeping pace with the growth in consumption demand .

To address this gap, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) facilitated a three-day regional workshop involving African and Asian experts to share knowledge experiences on better rice production . 

“It is important that we need to redouble efforts in sharing knowledge and experiences on better production but also for better trade in rice, using opportunities such as the African Continental Free Trade Area. There is no short cut to achieving some level of respectable self-sufficiency other than enhancing productivity, which at the moment is at a very low level,” said Abebe Haile-Gabriel, FAO Assistant Director-General and Regional Representative for Africa at the event.  “By sharing knowledge and experiences on best practices , we are contributing to a more sustainable agrifood system transformation in Africa,” he emphasized.

“The Government of Tanzania is keen to tap into the knowledge and experience of some Asian countries such as Viet Nam and Thailand which are among the top three rice exporting countries in the world,” said Nyasebwa Chimagu, the Director of Crops Development in the Ministry of Agriculture, who was representing the Minister for Agriculture Hussein Bashe. “We value the experience of some Asian countries that have succeeded to boost productivity in rice farming through various strategies including rice intensification systems,” he said.

Increasing rice yields in Africa

Africa’s top rice-producing countries include Nigeria, Tanzania, Madagascar, Liberia, Uganda, Mali, Sierra Leone, Cote d’ Ivoire, Ghana, Gambia, Benin, and Cameroon. But more than half of all African countries are net rice importers.

African rice consumption is projected to reach 34.9 million tonnes of milled rice by 2025. If current trends continue, African rice production will meet only two-thirds of demand and more than 12 million tonnes of rice will need to be imported each year, at an annual cost of more than USD 5 billion.

While imports from Asia will likely address the gap, some African countries have made significant strides in increasing their rice production driven largely by political will and commitment to put in place the right policies, strategies, and institutional mechanisms.

In Tanzania, for example, rice production has increased in recent years because of coordinated efforts by the Government and other stakeholders, including FAO, which has made rice the second most important food crop after maize.

Despite progress, productivity remains low, with an average yield of one to three tonnes per hectare which is less than half of the average yield achieved in major rice producing countries such as China.

Reasons for low productivity include climate change, insufficient application of new technologies, the use of low-yielding varieties, low levels of private sector involvement in the rice value chain, insufficient irrigation infrastructure and low levels of youth involvement in agriculture.

Learning from Asia

Valuable lessons were shared at the workshop from the Asian rice value chain including price and trade policies, research and extension, agricultural education, seeds systems development, private sector development and technical know-how in plant production, protection, harvesting, processing and trade.

Through South-South Cooperation, sharing these lessons can help African countries avoid similar hurdles and related costs.

“South-South and Triangular Cooperation offers an effective delivery mechanism towards the Sustainable Development Goals in Africa,” said Peter Anaadumba, South-South and Triangular Cooperation specialist at the FAO Regional Office for Africa. “Through SSTC, sustainable agricultural production and profitability can be increased, and new technologies and innovations can be introduced to drive progress.”

Other speakers at the workshop were from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), AfricaRice and the Coalition for African Rice Development (CARD).

Resources

Explore FAO’s digital publication on South-South and Triangular Cooperation in Africa

https://www.fao.org/3/cc1960en/online/cc1960en.html

FAO

FAO

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations that leads international efforts to defeat hunger. FAO's goal is to achieve food security for all and make sure that people have regular access to enough high-quality food to lead active, healthy lives. With over 194 member states, FAO works in over 130 countries worldwide.