Can Africa grow more rice and alleviate food insecurity?

Published 2024년 2월 16일

Tridge summary

A study by scientists from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Huazhong Agricultural University, Africa Rice Center, and Wageningen University and Research suggests that Africa's rice sector could significantly boost its yield through improved agronomic practices, without needing extensive land conversion. With rice demand in Africa expected to more than double in the next 25 years due to population growth and increased consumption, the continent currently imports up to 40% of its rice. The research indicates that better land development, soil and plant nutrition, weed control, and water management could increase yields and decrease the need for imports and land conversion.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Africa’s rice sector has major opportunities to increase its yield gains through improved agronomic practices while avoiding massive land conversion, a study by international scientists has claimed. The research team claims that rice demand in Africa is projected to more than double over the next 25 years due to population growth and increased rice consumption. The study by the research team estimates that the continent imports up to 40 percent of its rice. “Nearly 15 million hectares of rice are waiting for yield improvement in Africa, but no yield gain can be achieved without better agronomy,” said Patricio Grassini, the University of Nebraska–Lincoln professor of agronomy who coordinated the team working on the research study. Agronomic practices involving improved land development, soil and plant nutrition, weed control and water management, as well as moderate cropland expansion, “could give the region a more optimistic future,” said Kazuki Saito, a former researcher at the ...

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