New centres raise cassava’s outlook in Sierra Leone
17-Dec-2009This
follows support from the Common Fund for Commodities, International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Sierra Leone Agricultural
Research Institute and other partners.
The processing centres, which are located in five different communities
including Waterloo, Bo District, Njala Agricultural Research Centre
(NARC), Makeni City/Teko, and Hamdalai in Sierra Leone, are part of a
$1.6 million Common Fund for Commodities (CFC) funded project involving
Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Benin Republic. The project is seeking value
addition to cassava and to consequently boost production and generate
wealth.
“It will also improve livelihood, incomes of farmers and stakeholders
in the cassava enterprise,” said Prof Lateef Sanni, Project
Coordinator, for the Common Fund for Commodities Funded project. “More
importantly, this will create market and drive the production of
cassava.”
Since 1990, cassava production in Sierra Leone has been on the upbeat
climbing from 178,200 metric tons in 1990 to 1,236,852 mt in 2007.
Dr Alfred Dixon, Director General, Sierra Leone Agricultural Research
Institute said the utilisation of cassava and creation of products such
as gari - a Nigerian-introduced staple - has actually created demand
for the crop. Consequently, cassava is now second to rice as a staple
with people eating both the leaves and tubers of the crop.
The establishment of the processing centres has also spurred interest
in cassava production in local communities. Dorris Kargbo, a farmer and
beneficiary of the cassava centre in Hamdalai Village said, in her
community alone, about 40 farmer-groups have been formed for cassava
production.
Each of the groups comprises about 30 farmers each. The groups will
ensure the steady supply of cassava tubers to the processing centre
which will process the tubers into gari, foofoo, cassava cake and
cassava doughnut among others. “This will create jobs to our people,
generate wealth and reduce poverty. It is our own strategy of
contributing to poverty reduction in Sierra Leone,” Ms Kargbo said.
Traditionally, cassava tubers in Sierra Leone are harvested, boiled and
eaten. The limited utilisation of cassava often times results to glut
during periods of bumper harvest.
Ms Kargbo, while expressing gratitude to the funders of the project
said the processing centres have created a market that will mop up
cassava in the future. “This will reduce postharvest losses and make
cassava production profitable,” she added.
Source: Afrol News
