PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Marie K. Thompson
DATE: December 16, 2002
IFDC
Innovative Technology Increases Farmers’ Agricultural
Productivity, Maintains Resource Base
IFDC—an International Center for Soil Fertility and
Agricultural Development—has developed an innovative approach to
agricultural development called Integrated Soil Fertility Management
(ISFM), involving not just farmers, researchers, and extension
workers but also bankers and traders, including inputs dealers and
fertilizer enterprises. The
holistic approach, based on the agribusiness system at the regional
level, combines participatory methods to develop and extend ISFM
technologies and support institutional changes that enable their
adoption and facilitate effective linkages between farmers and the
“market.” The
primary donors for this work are the U. S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) and the International Fertilizer Industry
Association (IFA). Another
project sponsored by the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) enhances the ISFM work.
“ISFM-based
intensification technologies are based on the combined use of soil
amendments and chemical fertilizers,” says Dr. Arno Maatman,
Leader, IFDC Input Accessibility Program.
“Different amendments exist, and their requirement depends
on soil characteristics. Organic resources are used for improved
soil organic matter status. Limestone
can be used to improve the pH level; soluble sources of phosphorus
and phosphate rock are frequently used to increase the availability
of phosphorus. The more
difficult challenge is to improve the status of soil organic matter.
More and better organic matter is needed.
ISFM technologies that integrate the use of inorganic
fertilizers with crop residue recycling,
(green) manure, fodder crops, mixed cropping, crop rotation
and agroforestry can improve the availability and quality of organic
matter. The technologies lead in time to improved fertilizer use
efficiency.”
The new
approach increases the accessibility of fertilizer for farmers,
raises the agricultural productivity level, and maintains the
natural resource base. Its
potential has been demonstrated from the West African “Gold
Coast” to the Sahel, for crops like maize, sorghum, millet and
rice. ISFM technologies produce yields that are 2-3 times higher
than average yields. Return
on (invested) capital exceeds 100%, with a value: cost ratio well
above 2, and returns to family labor are 2-6 times higher than the
average salary rate prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa.
The ISFM project is now operating in Benin, Burkina Faso,
Ghana, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, and Togo with more than 2,000 farmers
in more than 100 villages participating.
Emphasis is placed on participatory approaches to develop
ISFM technologies that are suitable to agroecological and
socioeconomic conditions of farmers and that consider their needs,
interests, and capacities. Thus,
farmers select, experiment, and adapt in their own fields the
methods developed with research and extension staff.
This freedom of choice and action allows for innovation.
One of
the farmers who has benefited from this technology is Edah Kehinnou,
a woman farmer from the small village of Ahohoue, Benin. Kehinnou grows crops of maize, cowpeas, and groundnuts on her
three fields. The ISFM
package that she uses includes phosphate rock, legumes (cowpeas or
groundnut) and other fertilizers.
On her farm of less than 1 ha, she applied 300 kg of
phosphate rock and harvested 4,175 kilograms per hectare of maize.
During the second season, she harvested 120 kilograms of
cowpeas on two-tenths hectare of land.
She prefers to grow cowpeas rather than mucuna because the
cowpeas not only may add nitrogen to the soil but also provide
needed revenue. This
year the rains came later so she applied fertilizer later and in a
smaller dosage. When
the rains come later, these farmers prefer to reduce their risks and
try to apply smaller dosages of fertilizer in sequences—a “wait
and see approach.” Kehinnou
treated the cowpeas four times with crop protection products (CPPs)
to avoid insects. When
farmers like her do not have money to purchase CPPs, they
manufacture their own using leaves of the neem tree, locally
produced soap, and other natural remedies.
“IFDC
collaborates with both international and national agricultural
research institutes to develop new ideas on ISFM technologies for
different agroecological zones,” Maatman says.
“Technological options that appear to be of interest for
the ISFM village-level projects are considered for experimentation
through a participatory screening process that involves IFDC, the
partner institutions, and the target farmers.
Farmer’s experiments and alternative ideas are also
considered. The process
results in the design of mutual learning plots, i.e., experiments
set up with the farmers to test and fine tune ISFM options.”
IFDC—An
International Center for Soil Fertility and Agricultural
Development—is a public, international organization (PIO), which
was founded in 1974 to assist in the quest for global food security.
The nonprofit Center’s mission is to increase agricultural
productivity through the development and transfer of effective,
environmentally sound plant nutrient technology and agricultural
marketing expertise.
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