Index Investing News
Thursday, April 23, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Index Investing News
No Result
View All Result

Digging Africa Deeper into Hunger; Annual Green Revolution Forum ignores widespread failure of its push for industrialized agriculture

by Index Investing News
August 30, 2023
in World
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Home World
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Women share nutritious diverse local crop varieties at 2022 Djimini seed fair in Senegal. The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa is helping rewrite African laws and policies to favor conversion to hybrid and GMO maize seeds. Credit: AFSA or Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA)
  • Opinion by Timothy A. Wise (cambridge, ma.)
  • Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Inter Press Service

CAMBRIDGE, MA., Aug 29 (IPS) – As the adage goes, when you find yourself stuck in a hole, stop digging. As African leaders and their philanthropic and bilateral sponsors prepare for another glitzy African Green Revolution Forum, convening September 5-8 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, they are instead handing out new shovels to dig the continent deeper into a hunger crisis caused in part by their failing obsession with corporate-led industrialized agriculture.

Instead of cutting food insecurity in half, as the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) promised at its founding in 2006, the continent has spiraled in the opposite direction. The number of chronically “undernourished” people in AGRA’s 13 focus countries has increased nearly 50%, not decreased, according to recent hunger data from the United Nations.

AGRA’s corporate cheerleaders will try to blame the continent’s deepening cavern of hunger on disruptions from the COVID pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, but chronic hunger had already risen 31% by 2018 in AGRA countries, as I documented in my 2020 Tufts University study. The hole was already getting deeper.

Summit host Tanzania is a case in point. As the government readies another Green Revolution festival of self-congratulation, refusing to allow Tanzanian farm groups to offer a more critical perspective and more effective solutions, UN figures show a 34% increase in number of undernourished Tanzanians since 2006. An estimated 59% of Tanzanians suffer moderate or severe levels of food insecurity, according to survey data from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

African farmers: “Put down the Green Revolution shovels”

Once again, African farmer organizations are calling on African leaders and the donors who support them to put down the Green Revolution shovels, climb out of the hole, survey the damage their failing agricultural development model has wrought, and change course to more farmer-centered and sustainable ecological agriculture.

The Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa concluded its recent continental meeting on seed rights denouncing “AGRA and other corporate actors’ continued pressure to influence African government seed policies and biosafety regulations to increase corporate capture and control of seed on the continent.” They have scheduled a virtual press conference August 30, demanding “No Decisions About Us Without Us!”

In calling for a strategic reset, they are not ignoring the complex causes of hunger on the continent – climate change, conflict and corruption exacerbated by pandemic disruptions and rising costs of fertilizers and food imports from Russia and Ukraine. They are recognizing that the Green Revolution’s corporate-driven, technology-based strategy for rural uplift has proven unfit to help small-scale farmers cope with such challenges.

In 2006, AGRA offered a coherent strategy and admirably ambitious goals. Its aggressive promotion of commercial seeds and synthetic fertilizers would catalyze a virtuous cycle of agricultural development. Rising yields would feed the hungry and stimulate further investments in productivity-enhancing farm technologies. AGRA’s self-proclaimed “theory of change” would double food-crop productivity and incomes for 30 million small-scale farming households by 2020 while cutting hunger in half.

Seventeen years – and more than one billion dollars – later, the evidence shows that AGRA’s theory of change was flawed at every turn. Those seeds and fertilizers did not produce a productivity revolution. Yields rose only 18% over 14 years, barely faster than before the new Green Revolution push. Maize yields grew only 29% despite billions of dollars in government subsidies to allow farmers to buy – and corporations to sell – the inputs. Meanwhile, more nutritious and climate-resilient traditional crops such as millet and sorghum saw yields stagnate or decline as farmers planted more subsidized maize.

With limited yield improvements, farmers didn’t see more food or higher incomes from sales of their promised new surplus production. They saw a losing proposition, with the costs of seeds and fertilizers outpacing the expected returns from crop sales. When the subsidies were cut as government budgets were squeezed, farmers stopped buying the seeds and fertilizers and went back to their old seeds, if they had managed to save any. Many found themselves in debt after input purchases failed to pay off their investment.

Most found farmland that was now less fertile than before, the nutrients drained by monocultures of maize. The fertilizers fed the maize, not the soil, which continued to lose fertility, starved for the organic matter provided by more ecological methods such as intercropping and manure applications.

So no one should be surprised to find hunger on the rise. Farmers were not growing much more food. What food they were growing – mostly starchy staples like maize and rice – were less nutritious than the mix of crops they used to grow. And they had little new cash income to purchase more food, never mind a diverse and nutritious diet. Many had less cash as they tried to pay off debts from their failed investments in commercial seeds and fertilizers.

Cosmetic changes, less transparency

International donors have failed to heed African farmers’ calls to change course. Instead, AGRA rolls out new corporate branding, a facelift not the full makeover Africa needs.

At last year’s Green Revolution Forum, attendees were treated to a slick set of videos announcing that the forum was removing the term “green revolution” from its name. Indeed, this year’s gathering calls itself the African Food Systems Summit. And AGRA itself dropped “green revolution” from its name, declaring with no real explanation that it would now just go by its acronym, AGRA.

AGRA literally stands for nothing at this point. Calling its new five-year strategy “AGRA 3.0,” leaders refuse to acknowledge the failures of their Green Revolution model. They keep promoting new versions of the same failed approaches. AGRA continues to foster pro-business policy changes within African governments, like the one it has helped push in Zambia this year. It promotes “agro-poles” – 250,000 acre “farm blocks,” often located on land grabbed from local communities so corporate investors can establish industrial-scale farms.

Like many tech upgrades, AGRA 3.0 gives African farmers less of what they really need, not more.

This year, AGRA’s cosmetic changes include a newly redesigned web site, replete with AGRA’s new logo but missing even the rudimentary progress reports it used to make available to the public. Scrubbed from the site – or conveniently buried in it – is last year’s damning donor-commissioned evaluation, which highlighted AGRA’s many failures to deliver on its promises.

African farmers have a different vision. They want donors and governments to stop supporting the failing Green Revolution initiative and instead shift their support to lower cost, farmer-centered, ecological agriculture. Farmers are producing their own organic fertilizers and pesticides from local materials, with excellent results. The simple and low-cost innovation of “green manure-cover-cropping” has scientists working with some 15 million small-scale maize farmers in Africa to plant local varieties of trees and nitrogen-fixing food crops in their maize fields, tripling maize yields at no cost to the farmer.

The solutions are at hand. It is past time for Green Revolution promoters to put down the shovels and stop digging Africa deeper into hunger.

IPS UN Bureau

Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
Follow IPS News UN Bureau on Instagram

© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

Where next?

Related news

Browse related news topics:

Latest news

Read the latest news stories:

  • Digging Africa Deeper into Hunger; Annual Green Revolution Forum ignores widespread failure of its push for industrialized agriculture Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Africa Climate Summit: Time for Tangible, Impactful, & Accountable Climate Action Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Sudan: ‘Civilians need life-saving assistance now,’ says UN relief chief Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Syria-Türkiye: UN completes 200th cross-border aid mission since February quakes Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Hundreds of thousands trafficked into online criminality across SE Asia Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • With COVID-19 ‘here to stay’, new tools essential to continue fight: Tedros Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • UN appeals for nuclear test ban amid ‘alarming rise in global mistrust’ Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Niger spiralling into ‘protection crisis’ following takeover: UNHCR Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • Ukraine: Widespread learning loss continues due to war, COVID-19 Tuesday, August 29, 2023
  • IPBES Third Season of Hit Podcast Nature Insights Speed Dating with the Future Takes Listeners Inside Humanitys Relationship With Nature Tuesday, August 29, 2023

In-depth

Learn more about the related issues:

Share this

Bookmark or share this with others using some popular social bookmarking web sites:





Source link

Tags: AfricaAgricultureAnnualdeeperDiggingFailureForumgreenHungerIgnoresindustrializedPushrevolutionwidespread
ShareTweetShareShare
Previous Post

Are U.S. Taxpayers Unintentionally Funding China’s Military Development?

Next Post

Davis Property Inks Full-Building Lease Near Seattle

Related Posts

The Costly Illusion of the Golden Dome – The Cipher Brief

The Costly Illusion of the Golden Dome – The Cipher Brief

by Index Investing News
April 21, 2026
0

OPINION — “The Golden Dome for America strategy remains centered on affordable and scalable capabilities. In the short-term, we will...

The Grocery Bill Is Calm – The AgriFood System Is Not — Global Issues

The Grocery Bill Is Calm – The AgriFood System Is Not — Global Issues

by Index Investing News
April 17, 2026
0

If you are reading commodity price movements as evidence that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has been absorbed...

New U.S. autonomous Squire Seaglider conducts test flight

New U.S. autonomous Squire Seaglider conducts test flight

by Index Investing News
April 13, 2026
0

Key PointsREGENT confirms successful ground-effect flight of its autonomous Squire defense Seaglider in the United States on April 13, 2026.Squire...

Can global supply chains recover from the Iran war? | US-Israel war on Iran

Can global supply chains recover from the Iran war? | US-Israel war on Iran

by Index Investing News
April 9, 2026
0

Conflict upends flow of critical raw materials for manufacturing, aviation and technology.The United States and Iran may have agreed to...

Artemis II crew will see total solar eclipse during moon flyby

Artemis II crew will see total solar eclipse during moon flyby

by Index Investing News
April 5, 2026
0

The crew is expected to lose contact with Earth for about 40 minutes Monday while they're behind the far side...

Next Post
Davis Property Inks Full-Building Lease Near Seattle

Davis Property Inks Full-Building Lease Near Seattle

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: ORCL, T, BBY

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: ORCL, T, BBY

RECOMMENDED

Talkspace: Attractively Valued With Promising Outlook For Worthwhile Progress (NASDAQ:TALK)

Talkspace: Attractively Valued With Promising Outlook For Worthwhile Progress (NASDAQ:TALK)

August 27, 2024
Earnings Preview: Salesforce will likely deliver another strong quarter

Earnings Preview: Salesforce will likely deliver another strong quarter

November 25, 2023
When It Comes to US-China Talks, Something “Vital” Is Still Missing

When It Comes to US-China Talks, Something “Vital” Is Still Missing

June 20, 2023
No funding winter for Indian Fintechs,  bn poured into Fintechs within the final two yr alone

No funding winter for Indian Fintechs, $6 bn poured into Fintechs within the final two yr alone

August 28, 2024
All The Individuals She’s Dated Over Time – Hollywood Life

All The Individuals She’s Dated Over Time – Hollywood Life

February 3, 2025
Tyrone Mings unique interview: Aston Villa star on overcoming damage and errors as he talks thrilling occasions at Villa Park | Soccer Information

Tyrone Mings unique interview: Aston Villa star on overcoming damage and errors as he talks thrilling occasions at Villa Park | Soccer Information

December 14, 2024
NASA decides to maintain 2 astronauts in area till Feb.

NASA decides to maintain 2 astronauts in area till Feb.

August 24, 2024
Nvidia slips even as Wall Street commends ‘impressive’ GTC keynote; chips follow

Nvidia slips even as Wall Street commends ‘impressive’ GTC keynote; chips follow

March 19, 2024
Index Investing News

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Investing, World News, Stocks, Market Analysis, Business & Financial News, and more from the top trusted sources.

  • 1717575246.7
  • Browse the latest news about investing and more
  • Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • xtw18387b488

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In