“NRI's mission is to provide distinctive, high quality and relevant research, consultancy, teaching and advice in support of sustainable development, economic growth and poverty reduction.”
“NRI's mission is to provide distinctive, high quality and relevant research, consultancy, teaching and advice in support of sustainable development, economic growth and poverty reduction.”
Dr Helena Posthumus of NRI attended the 5th World Congress on Conservation Agriculture (www.wcca2011.org) in Brisbane, Australia (26-29 September 2011). Conservation Agriculture is a farming system approach based on three principles (minimum soil disturbance, permanent soil cover and appropriate crop rotations to reduce pests and diseases) that is seen as a sustainable way of rainfed agriculture in areas with erratic rainfall and degraded soils. Scientists from all over the world came together for four days to discuss the latest findings and advances in conservation agriculture and farming systems design. Helena made a poster and oral presentation on the ABACO project (Agroecology Based Aggradation-Conservation Agriculture: targeting innovations to combat soil degradation and food insecurity in semi-arid Africa)
Some of the take-home messages of the congress included:
The EU-funded ABACO project aims to do this in seven countries in semi-arid Africa over the period 2011-2014. The project seeks to increase farmers' innovative capacity by facilitating on-farm experimentation and learning, supported by controlled experiments and modelling to optimise productivity as well as tradeoffs between different agro-ecological functions. These different sources of knowledge and research outputs will be shared and evaluated in innovation platforms, bringing multiple stakeholders together. The ABACO project is led by the African Conservation Tillage Network (ACT); the consortium exists of the following partners: ACT, CIRAD, CIRDES, EMBRAPA, FOFIFA, SOFECSA, NRI, Wageningen University, and Yellow Window.