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Africa SOS: need forPermaculture, sustainable practices/population,

Submitted by Harel B on March 30, 2006 - 2:00pm.

'Barren future' for Africa's soil

Africa's farmland is rapidly becoming barren and incapable of sustaining the continent's already hungry population, according to a report.

The report shows that more than 80% of the farmland in Sub-Saharan Africa is plagued by severe degradation.

This is a major cause of poverty and hunger in sub-Saharan Africa, where one in three people is undernourished.

Population growth is leading to the overexploitation of farmland, depleting soil of nutrients, the report says.

Farmers' inability to afford fertiliser is a major contributing factor, it adds. Deforestation, use of marginal lands, and poor agricultural practices also play a role.

The International Center for Soil Fertility and Agricultural Development (IFDC) report tracks soil health on the continent from 1980 to 2004.

'Stagnant productivity'

More than 60% of Africa's population is directly engaged in agriculture. But crop productivity has remained stagnant, while cereal yields in Asia have risen three-fold over the past four decades.

"Farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa have traditionally cleared land, grown a few crops, then moved on to clear more land, leaving the land to regain fertility," the authors write in their report.

"But population pressure now forces farmers to grow crop after crop, mining or depleting the soil of nutrients while giving nothing back."

During the 2002-2004 cropping season, about 85% of African farmland had nutrient depletion rates of more than 30kg per hectare yearly.

[question for PCI readers: can you put those numbers in perspective?
and what are the numbers for the US? For the world? -Harel]

About 40% of farmland had nutrient depletion rates greater than 60kg per hectare yearly.

...Fertiliser use in Africa is the lowest in the world, at less than 10% of the world average. African farmers are put off by high costs, the report says.

..It calls for policy and investment strategies to reverse nutrient depletion and restore soil fertility. These include making the use of mineral and organic fertilisers more economically attractive to farmers...The report says increasing productivity on African farms is critical to feeding a population that is expected to grow to 1.8 billion people by 2050.

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4860694.stm

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Can the post-carbon and permaculture movements network with
organizations around the globe, including in Africa, to turn
this around? It's a matter of sustainable development,
a liveable planet, and more, not to mention also a matter
or the morality of our movement and a matter of life and death..

Harel

YES ,THERE IS ANOTHER PROBLEM IN AFRICA,BUT IT IS THE SAME PROBLEM THE WORLD OVER, FOSSIL FUEL BASED ECONOMY AND AGRICULTURE IS AT ITS PEAK,MANY COUNTRIES ARE IN A STATE OF COLLASPE DU TO THE FACT THEY CANNOT GROW ENOUGH FOOD AND SUSTAIN THE POPULATIONS THAT LIVE THERE, ANY COUNTRY THAT IS A MAJOR IMPORTER OF FOOD IS IN THIS CATAGORY,MANY PLACES ACROSS THE GLOBE ARE IN A STATE OF COLLAPSE

Submitted by mbrycki on April 6, 2006 - 6:17pm.

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