Ghana: Northern, middle belt agricultural zone in crisis

Published 2024년 8월 15일

Tridge summary

Drought and army worm invasions are causing significant damage to maize and other cereal crops in Ghana's Northern region, with the Sissala district of the Upper West Region and many areas in the Northern Region being severely affected. The country's inability to utilize its 104 central pivot irrigation systems, coupled with the failure of a US$99 million dam project, has exacerbated the situation. The World Bank's investment in climate smart agriculture has not noticeably improved irrigation usage, with less than 3% of Ghana's cultivated land benefiting from irrigation. Additionally, dry weather in the Bono, Bono East, and Ahafo Regions has led to a surge in crop damages due to fall army worms and black insects, escalating prices for key commodities. The Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana has called for the establishment of a National Agriculture Risk Management Coordination Centre and the transfer of agricultural management and advisory roles to technocrats to mitigate these risks and enhance food security.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

…as drought, army worms ravage farms By Wisdom JONNY-NUEKPE Hectares of maize and other cereal cultivations in the Northern sector of the country are currently being destroyed by drought, leaving farmers scrambling for solutions to save their livelihoods. B&FT sources indicate that arid conditions in the Northern belt are currently worse in the maize fields of the Sissala district in the Upper West and many parts of the Northern Region, where hundreds of hectares of farmland have been desiccated and destroyed by the ongoing heatwave. Since June of this year, the state of maize farms in the Northern Region—possibly the worst in the last decade—has left many farmers shocked as they scramble to find makeshift solutions to salvage the situation. According to stakeholders, the situation could have been improved if irrigation and mechanized farming had been prioritized as key drivers of the country’s food production agenda. Certainly, the country has 104 central pivot irrigation systems ...
Source: Thebftonline

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