Solving Africa’s weed problem
2 July 2009 By Leonard Gianessi & Alexander Rinkus, Croplife Foundation
As potential food shortages loom, donor, development and government agencies are assessing technologies and policies that promise to significantly increase food production in sub-Saharan Africa. Among these technologies are increased use of fertilizers, improved irrigation practices, advanced maize seeds, effective pest management systems, biotechnology … but not weed control. These organisations are ignoring an old problem for African farmers. Weed invasion should be adequately addressed if farmers are to attain optimal yields and gain the full value of additional use of fertilizer, irrigation and improved seeds. In any given year a small scale farmer can lose anywhere between a fifth and their full production due to uncontrollable weeds. In many cases entire fields are forced to be abandoned as the noxious plants grow and spiral out of control. The cons of hand weeding Currently, the primary method of weed control by smallholder farmers in Not only is this a frightening amount of time in the field hand weeding, this is twenty billion hours spent in a bent double position. To weed just one hectare you would need to walk ten kilometers bent over at the waist ripping weeds out of the ground. As a result women in
Even setting aside these basic health and human rights issues and focusing on the effectiveness of current practices it is clear that right now the forty billion hours of hand weeding are not even possible. There is simply not enough labour to complete the hours. The result is that weeds grow so prolifically that either not enough weeding is done or is done too late to prevent serious yield losses. The spraying of herbicides to remove weeds from African farm fields is a viable and proven technology which could be readily adopted with subsequent large increases in yield. The pros of using herbicides
Herbicides have been tested for forty years in To address these constraints, CropLife Foundation (CLF) and CNFA, Inc. have launched a pilot project in
For more information go to CLF's website here or e-mail the author at arinkus@croplifefoundation.org About CropLife Foundation CropLife Foundation was created in 2001 to promote and advance sustainable agriculture and the environmentally sound use of crop protection products (pesticides) and bioengineered agriculture. Through sound science-based research and education, the organisation helps global agriculture economically produce safe, high quality, abundant food, fiber and other crops, thus ensuring food security and alleviating poverty, suffering and hardship.
Increasing crop production and improving farmers' lives



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