{"id":71158,"date":"2014-12-04T12:52:11","date_gmt":"2014-12-04T12:52:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/4cd.e16.myftpupload.com\/?p=71158"},"modified":"2014-12-04T10:54:50","modified_gmt":"2014-12-04T10:54:50","slug":"africa-soil-crisis-threat-food-security","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citifmonline.com\/2014\/12\/africa-soil-crisis-threat-food-security\/","title":{"rendered":"Africa ‘soil crisis threat’ to food security"},"content":{"rendered":"

Neglecting the health of Africa’s soil will lock the continent into a cycle of food insecurity for generations to come, a report has warned.<\/p>\n

The publication by the Montpellier Panelsaid the problem needed to be given a higher priority by aid donors.<\/p>\n

It added that soil degradation was also hampering economic development, costing the continent’s farmers billions of dollars in lost income.<\/p>\n

The study has been published ahead of the2015 international year of soils.<\/p>\n

The Montpellier Panel – made up of agricultural, trade and ecology experts from Europe and Africa – warned that land degradation reduced soil fertility, leading to lower crop yields and increased greenhouse gas emissions.<\/p>\n

“In Africa, the impacts are substantial where 65% of arable land, 30% of grazing land and 20% of forests are already damaged,” it observed.<\/p>\n

Panel chairman Sir Prof Gordon Conway, from Imperial College London, told BBC News: “We spend a lot of time talking about crops and we spend a lot of time talking about livestock. We have big debates about all kinds of agriculture, yet we tend to ignore that it all depends on soils.”<\/p>\n

He added that recent measurements had shown that soil degradation levels across the continent were very high.<\/p>\n

“Serious land degradation [accounts for] about a quarter of land area of sub-Saharan Africa – it is a vast area,” he said.<\/p>\n

“There are about 180 million people who are living on land that is in some way or another degraded. It is really very severe.”<\/p>\n

The problem threatened food production in a region that was already experiencing very low crop yields, he explained.<\/p>\n

“The average yield in sub-Saharan Africa is about one tonne per hectare. In India, it is about two-and-a-half tonnes, while in China it is more than three tonnes per hectare.<\/p>\n

“So in Africa, we have the combination of land degradation, poor yields and a growing population.”<\/p>\n

‘Global priority’<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir Gordon described the issue as a “crisis of land degradation and soil management”, adding: “We have got to do something about it”.<\/p>\n

The panel made a number of recommendations, including:<\/p>\n