Agriculture stakeholders in Tanzania hail CGIAR move on integration
Stakeholders in the agricultural sector in Tanzania support
the move by CGIAR to integrate the activities of the different centres and
research programs (CRPs) and to better align with the country’s priorities in
developing its agriculture sector.
The stakeholders agreed on this at a national consultation workshop
on CGIAR “site integration” that was held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on 4
December 2015 organized by IITA on behalf of CGIAR and CRPs working in the
country. The aim was to discuss how CGIAR/CRPs can work better together and
align their activities and research agenda to the country’s priorities. This
was the second such workshop organized by IITA for CGIAR; the first one was
held in Abuja, Nigeria, in November 2015.
The participants were drawn from the different ministries,
national agricultural research systems (NARS), universities, NGOs, donor
community, private sector, and farmers’ groups.
The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture, Food
Security and Cooperatives, Sophia Kaduma, said that integration across the
different CRPs and with a wide range of national partners and stakeholders in
the agricultural sector can enhance the outcomes of CGIAR’s research agenda.
She noted the potential of the agriculture sector in
Tanzania’s efforts to reduce poverty and achieve its developmental goals of
shifting to a middle-income economy by 2025, and reiterated the role of
research and development to improve agriculture and combat climate change and
her government’s commitment to R&D.
Representatives from the donor community including the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation, Irish Aid, USAID, and the World Bank also
support the move, which is expected to lead to more efficient use of donor
funding and reduction of duplication of efforts.
“Integration” and “alignment” were viewed as important in
ensuring that development projects focused on the country’s priorities and not
the donors’/centre’s whims.
Representatives from the farming communities and the private
sector were also at the forum and highlighted some of the challenges they
faced. “Farming has to be profitable. As farmers, we face many issues including
poor extension services. The extension staff are few, without resources. We are
therefore unable to access new technologies from research. Therefore, the
integration should look at how to support extension to reach farmers,” said
Omary Mwaimu from AMSHA Institute.
Participants at the event identified areas where CGIAR/CRP
support was needed:
·
Dissemination and adoption of new technologies
from research.
·
Business and enterprise development to enable
farmers to make money from farming.
·
Capacity building of local researchers
especially in areas such as biotechnology.
·
Value addition and management of postharvest
losses.
·
Productivity improvement with focus on climate
change – one of the major challenges facing smallholder farmers who need
support in terms of what crops to grow in the face of climate change.
·
Sustainable intensification of smallholder
systems to increase agricultural production and productivity on the same land
size but at the same time taking care of their natural resources.
At the end of the workshop, participants came up with a
framework for site integration that could help identify the issues and sites as
well as suggestions on how to govern and implement the integration, how to
monitor and evaluate impact and communicate both within the partners in the
integration framework and with external audiences and partners.
For site integration to work, participants agreed that adequate
resources should go into its implementation, and to ensure that all the
partners are able see the benefit of being part of the integrated approach.
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