14 June 2016. Kigali. Staff of the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) helped organize a side event during the 7th Africa Agriculture Science Week on ‘How research is contributing to Livestock Development Strategy for Africa (LiDESA)’.
The side event showcased contributions by projects under the CGIAR Research Program on Livestock and Fish and their local partners in four East and Southern Africa countries (Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Swaziland) to the LiDESA objectives, which include:
- Attracting public and private investments along the different livestock values chains
- Enhancing animal health and increasing the production, productivity and resilience of livestock systems
- Enhancing innovation, generation and utilization of technologies, capacities and entrepreneurship skills of livestock value chain actors
- Enhancing access to livestock markets, services and value addition
- livestock breeds, productivity, health systems, disease control
- land, feed and water resources and measures to reduce environmental harm
- input supplies and service delivery for animal agriculture
- livestock value addition
- livestock market information and market infrastructure
- competitiveness of African livestock products
- meeting sanitary and phyto-sanitary standards
- policy, legislative and institutional frameworks impinging on the livestock sector
- capacity in livestock research and development
Discussions at this AASW7 side event by these pan-African livestock R&D organizations (AU-IBAR and FARA, ILRI, ICARDA and CIAT) and the Rwanda Agriculture Board (RAB), which implements Rwanda’s national policy on agriculture and animal husbandry to deliver research and extension services, capacity development and partnerships—focused on how the national and international agricultural research systems could collaborate better.
A wrap-up session summarized the following key gaps and opportunities.
- Partnerships are key to achieve our goals and have impact on the ground. National partners should be involved in strategic aspects of projects and programs right from the inception phase so that they are part and parcel of the strategic agenda rather than looped in only at the implementation phases of the work, as is currently common.
- Science alone is not enough to bring about the transformational change we envisage. We need to strengthen country systems, particularly implementation by line ministries.
- Livestock research should also address the environmental footprints associated with livestock production, such as greenhouse gas emissions.
- Research on regional livestock trade issues, which are often ignored, should be strengthened because these aspects are important in resolving non-tariff barriers that hinder regional and cross-border trade.
The plenary recommended that:
- LiDESA set up a platform for stakeholders from the 54 member states
- FARA backstop the platform as a key science partner and work with the platform to make a case for larger investments in the livestock sector
- FARA strengthen its livestock agenda and raise the visibility of this agenda within FARA-organized events
- The relevance of livestock research be validated to ensure it is driven by the needs of target communities and their objectives.
View posters from this event:
- Engaging with partners in R4D to enhance animal health in smallholder pig value chain in Uganda
- Small ruminant value chain development in Ethiopia
- Piloting innovation and market linkages to transform smallholder dairy value chains in Tanzania
- Community-based breeding programs: Attractive and innovative approach to changing the lives of smallholders in low input systems
The Livestock Development Strategy for Africa (LiDESA) has the the goal ‘to transform the African livestock sector for enhanced contribution to socio-economic development and equitable growth’.
Five continental agencies that can help meet the LiDESA objectives are AU-IBAR, which is championing the LiDESA strategy in line with its role to support and coordinate livestock use; the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA), which is responsible for coordinating and advocating agricultural research-for-development; and three CGIAR centres—ILRI, which works for better lives through livestock; the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), which promotes sustainable livestock development in the dry areas; and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), which works to improve tropical forages for better livestock feeding.
One thought on “The Livestock Development Strategy for Africa”
This is indeed a laudable effort but what seems to be missing is two fundamental issues that hinders most efforts and development strategies in Africa. That is:
1. Deliberate strategy for effect implementation of the project. In Africa we are very good at brainstorming and coming up with laudable ideas, but when it comes to practical implementation, that is where the main challenge is.
2. Corruption not only in the agencies that supposed to anchor and ensure a successful implementation but also with the beneficiaries, as if corruption is in the blood of we the Africans.
Therefore, to me, any project or development strategy in Africa that do not take into account these two important development issues, certainly needs to be updated because it’s overall success greatly defend on how best we could handle these challenges.
Thanks.