News, learn, share and discuss about Africa & other life issues with over 250, 000 members worldwide & thousands of discussion going on. CLICK HERE TO JOIN FREE and get access to write, reply, use private message & much more free!. CLICK HERE TO SAY HELLO
AfricaTopForum
May 24, 2012, 02:58:35 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
 
   Home   Help Rules Search Login Register  
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Send this topic  |  Print  
Author Topic: BURKINA FASO: Farmers act on climate change  (Read 200 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Perfect
Administrator
*****
Online Online

Gender: Male
Posts: 6031



Activity
6%



« on: January 24, 2010, 10:43:40 AM »
ReplyReply


OUAGADOUGOU, 20 January 2010 (IRIN) - Disappointed by the “failure” of the Copenhagen talks to adequately help poor countries adapt to climate change, the Burkina Faso government and farmers are working to adjust farming techniques to changing weather patterns.

“Despite the failure of Copenhagen we must follow adaptation at our own cost because we have been experiencing the impacts of climate change in Burkina for several years, and they are getting worse,” Bassiaka Dao, confederation of farmers in Burkina Faso (CPF) president, told IRIN.

Dao said the US$10 billion that rich nations agreed to provide annually to developing countries to help mitigate climate change effects was insufficient. The UN said at the Copenhagen meetings that $25 billion to $50 billion per year would be required.

Impact

Over recent years the rains have begun and ended later than usual in Burkina Faso, continuing into October though September is traditionally harvest time, according to Dao.

The rains are also increasingly heavy, leading to soil erosion and flash floods, according to World Bank natural resource management specialist Emmanuel Nikiéma. Some 22,200 hectares of land were flooded in 2009 according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

“The rain comes in torrents, with the capacity to flood a field in 15 minutes,” Dao told IRIN.

Meanwhile desertification, long a problem in the north, has now spread in pockets to the south, Nikiéma said.

Longer rains mean crops risk rotting. Forty percent of the cowpea crop and much of the sorghum harvest rotted in 2009, Dao said.

Farmers need more outside help to help adapt to these new conditions, he said.

Through its National Action Adaptation to Climate Change programme, the government has channeled $3 million to help people adapt in the farming, livestock, forestry and water resource sectors.

A key agriculture activity is to extend traditional soil protection techniques, said Dao. Methods include digging “Zai” pits – compost-filled planting pits which hold water, helping deep-rooted vegetables grow; building up grass and rock barriers around crops to protect them from soil erosion; and cultivating manure in septic tanks to use as fertilizer.

But to enable crops to survive erratic rains, many more farmers need access to high-yield, quick-growing seeds, said the World Bank’s Nikiéma.

This is one of the priorities of the World Bank’s agricultural production and food security support to Burkina Faso, amounting to $54.5 million from 2010-2015. Last year the Bank spent $5 million on distributing quick-harvest sorghum, maize and cowpea seeds.

New varieties of cowpeas can be harvested in 45 days, down from 80, according to agricultural experts; sorghum and maize down to three months from four or five.

Francois Traoré, grain farmer in Burkina’s second largest city Bobo-Dioulasso and president of the National Union of Cotton Producers of Burkina, told IRIN more donors should follow suit.

“Aid to help farmers adapt to changes could open up new areas of agricultural production and transform how we produce crops here.”

Source http://www.irinnews.org
Logged
AfricaTopForum
   

 Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Send this topic  |  Print  
 
Jump to:  


Related Topics
Subject Started by Replies Views Last post
SOUTH AFRICA: Climate change tool helps identify vulnerable farmers
AGRICULTURE NEWS BOARD
Perfect 0 272 Last post September 05, 2009, 03:38:45 AM
by Perfect
BURKINA FASO: Feed the cows
AFRICAN NEWS BOARDS
Perfect 0 164 Last post May 14, 2010, 03:19:45 AM
by Perfect
BURKINA FASO: What next for Compaoré?
AFRICAN NEWS BOARDS
Perfect 0 166 Last post May 02, 2011, 01:25:52 AM
by Perfect
BURKINA FASO: What next for Compaoré?
AGRICULTURE NEWS BOARD
Perfect 0 153 Last post May 04, 2011, 10:37:25 AM
by Perfect
CLIMATE CHANGE: Farmers and forecasts
AGRICULTURE NEWS BOARD
Webmaster 0 58 Last post April 03, 2012, 04:19:36 AM
by Webmaster

If you require any help or if you have any questions, challenges, comments, suggestions or criticism please don’t hesitate Click here to write,
if it is sensitive send Personal Message to Global Captain or Admin. We love to hear from members and general public.

Contact |African Discussion Forum | Powered by SMF | SMF © 2006-2011, Simple Machines