Public–private partnership in the domestication of Allanblackia in Africa's humid tropics provides a good model for the domestication of traditionally important forest tree species of high economic potential. http://www.worldagroforestry.org/newsroom/highlights/obscure-forest-species-towards-globally-traded-commodity-lessons-allanblackia
MONA 98765-12871 CALL GIRLS IN LUDHIANA LUDHIANA CALL GIRL
03 oforidaniel icraf- ppp-allanblackia-fara-aasw-accra july 2013.pptx
1. Public-‐Private
partnerships
for
sustainable
agriculture
and
business
development:
Allanblackia
species
as
a
case
study
Ofori,
D.
A.1,
Asaah,
A.2,
Peprah,
T.3,
Tsobeng,
A.4,
Tchoundjeu,
Z.4,
Munjuga,
M.1,
Dawson,
I.K.1,
RutaDna,
F.,
Mowo,
J.G.1,
Jamnadass,
R.1
Event
on
Agroforestry
for
food
and
nutriDonal
security
in
Africa,
15
July
2013,
Africa
Agriculture
Science
Week,
Accra
1.
World
Agroforestry
Centre,
Nairobi,
Kenya
2.
World
Agroforestry
Centre,
Sierra
Leone
3.
World
Agroforestry
Centre,
Yaounde,
Cameroon
4.
Novel
Development,
Morogoro,
Tanzania
Contact:
d.ofori@cgiar.org
2. Contents
•
Background
•
Agroforestry
and
tree
products
•
Public-‐private
partnerships
•
Allanblackia
case
study
• Lessons
leant/
Conclusions
3. Background
• Africa
populaDon
is
set
to
increase
to
2
billion
by
2050
• Crop
yield
in
Sub-‐Saharan
Africa
is
the
world’s
lowest
• Only
27%
of
potenDal
yield,
according
to
the
FAO
• Bringing
diversity
of
species
into
wider
culDvaDon
provides
opportuniDes
to,
increase
producDvity,
combat
malnutriDon
,
adapt
to
climate
change
and
improve
livelihoods
4. Background
• There
is
a
need
for
innovaDve
approaches
to
address
food,
nutriDon,
environmental
and
livelihood
challenges.
Such
approaches
should
include:
• Agroforestry
• Tree
domesDcaDon
and
diversificaDon
• Public
and
private
partnerships
8. Role
of
Agroforestry
on
tree
diversity
and
producDvity
Science-‐based
solu;ons
to
problems
faced
by
farmers
Environment,
Biodiversity
Farmers
and
ProducDon
systems
Leveraging Benefits
Benefits and rewards
Improved on-farm productivity
Building assets
Generating income
Livelihood options
Reduced pressure on natural
habitats
Landscape connectivity
Habitat restoration
Ecosystem resilience
10. Public-‐private
partnerships
(
PPP)
• Public
private
partnership
(PPPs)
can
broadly
be
defined
as
collaboraDons
between
public
sector
and
private
enDDes
who
share
costs,
risks
and
benefits
in
order
to
jointly
plan
and
implement
acDviDes
towards
common
objecDves.
• The
2002
World
Summit
on
Sustainable
Development
highlighted
the
importance
of
PPPs
in
achieving
global
goals
of
sustainable
and
equitable
development.
Assessment
Workshop
for
a
PPP
Unit
in
Kenya,
29th-‐30th
November
2011,
at
ICIPE
11. Why
PPP?
• Binging
together
stakeholders
with
different
interests
and
organisaDonal
capaciDes,
• Sharing
of
resources
for
increasing
cost-‐
efficiency,
• Avoid
duplicaDons,
• Build
capaciDes
for
business
development
• Directly
responding
to
consumers’
needs
• Enhances
adopDon
and
impacts
of
research/
innovaDon
12. Why
PPP?
• PotenDal
to
raise
producDvity,
• Catalyst
for
broader
rural
development
–
creaDng
jobs
outside
of
farming
in
both
service
and
producDon
sectors
• Increases
the
level
of
private
sector
investment
• Sustainability
of
iniDaDve
13. ICRAF’s
Experience
with
PPP
• Novella
Partnership:
DomesDcaDon
of
Allanblackia
species
in
Africa
• Mars:
Improving
the
uDlizaDon
of
cocoa
companion
trees,
while
miDgaDng
the
negaDve
impacts
of
cocoa
culDvaDon
on
forest
cover
• Evergreen
agriculture
• Naturally
African
–
an
expanded
trade
promoDon
planorm
of
African
natural
products
from
a
diversity
of
culDvated
tree
species
• Development
of
business
models
to
link
smallholder
farmers
to
bio-‐energy
markets
16. Allanblackia
case
study
• shows
how
governments,
• private
sector,
• donors
and
• farmer
organizaDons
are
working
together
to
increase
investment,
producDvity
and
sustainability
in
African
agriculture.
17.
18. Importance
ProducDon
levels
• 120
fruits
/tree
• 40
kg
of
seeds/tree
• 12
kg
oil/tree
Uses:
mulDpurpose
• Timber
• Shade
• Medicine
• Seed
Oil
19. Allanblackia
oil
• Mostly
used
for
margarine
producDon,
soap
and
ointments
manufacturing
• Huge
market
for
Allanblackia
oil
>100,000
tons/yr
• Only
about
200
tons/yr
obtained
• Wild
harvesDng
is
unsustainable
• Need
for
domesDcaDon
20. SkepDcism
of
farmers
• PercepDon
that
they
are
abundant
in
the
forests
• lack
of
high
quality
planDng
materials,
• Lack
of
knowledge
on
propagaDon,
nursery
and
tree
husbandry,
• Earlier
iniDaDves
to
grow
sunflower,
citronella
etc
failed
21. SkepDcism
• uncertain
markets
and
low
price,
• unknown
nutriDonal
values
• LimitaDon
in
post
harvest
storage
and
processing
• Financial
limitaDons
• Unfavorable
policies
22. Novella
partnership
• The
Novella
partnership
is
a
corporate
mulD-‐
country
PPP
with
strong
development,
extension
and
conservaDon
components.
• Established
in
2002
• Its
main
aim
is
to
develop
domesDcaDon
techniques,
tree
management
pracDces,
conservaDon
strategies
and
supply
chain
for
Allanblackia
species
in
Africa
Assessment Workshop for a PPP Unit in Kenya, 29th-30th November 2011,
at ICIPE
23. Main
components
of
AB
domesDcaDon
• SensiDzaDon
and
encouragement
of
farmers
to
parDcipate
in
Allanblackia
domesDcaDon
• Range-‐wide
germplasm
collecDon,
development
of
propagaDon
methods
and
gene
conservaDon
• Studies
on
ecology,
abundance
and
sustainable
harvesDng
• IntegraDon
of
Allanblackia
in
agroforestry
farming
systems
• FacilitaDon
and
development
of
markeDng
networks
and
supply
chain
• Development
of
poverty
alleviaDon
opDons
in
the
rural
areas
through
promoDon
of
Allanblackia
24. Current
members
of
the
partnership
• Unilever:
Funding,
product
development
&
markeDng
• ICRAF:
DomesDcaDon
(selecDon,
propagaDon
&
germplasm
conservaDon),
Rural
Resource
Centres
(RRC)
• Novel
InternaDonal:
Supply
chain,
markeDng,
mulDplicaDon
and
distribuDon
• IUCN:
sustainable
harvesDng
&
biodiversity
conservaDon
• Farmers:
Smallholder
agroforestry
systems
• FORM:
Pilot
plantaDon
-‐
Ghana
• RSSDA:
Pilot
plantaDon
-‐
Nigeria
• UEBT:
CerDficaDon
of
organic
and
fair
trade
standards
• NARS,CSIR
for
Ghana,
UniversiDes,
ANR
etc.
25. Par;cipatory
tree
domes;ca;on
PRIORITY
SPECIES
Allanblackia
spp
ExploraDon
CollecDon
ConservaDon
ADOPTION
PRODUCTION
CHARACTERIZATION
MULTIPLICATION
Seed
VegetaDve
DIVERSE
GERMPLASM
MANAGEMENT
-‐
spacing
-‐
watering
-‐
ferDlizing
-‐
thinning
-‐
selecDon
-‐
fruit
set
-‐
pest/disease
-‐
conservaDon
-‐
indig.
Know.
ADOPTION
-‐ Producers
-‐ Processors
-‐ marketers
Sensi;za;on
Capacity
strengthening
26. SensiDzaDon
of
farmers
Workshops,
radio
&
TV
programmes
to
increase
naDonal
and
regional
awareness
27. MarkeDng
Supply
chain
and
market
development
#
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#######
#
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#########################
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Sudan
Algeria
Libya
Mali
Chad
Niger
Congo DR
Egypt
Angola
EthiopiaNigeria
South Africa
Namibia
Mauritania
Zambia
Tanzania
Kenya Som
alia
Mozambique
Botswana
Morocco
Congo
Madagascar
Cameroon
Zimbabwe
Gabon
Ghana
Guinea
Uganda
Central African
Republic
Tunisia
Senegal
Burkina Faso
Eritrea
W
.Sahara
Liberia
Sierra Leone
Djibouti
Swaziland
Country boundary
Country with study sites
# Species location point
Key
Lakes
30. RRC - Seed and
seedling
distribution
satellite
nursery
Farmer’s
fields
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
Local commercial
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
satellite
nursery
Goal
is
to
ensure
proper
exchange
and
delivery
of
germplasm
to
farmers
Farmer’s
fields
satellite
nursery
31. • Can
pay
school
fees
from
Allanblackia
• Can
buy
school
uniform
from
Allanblackia
32. More
opportuni;es
=
more
interest
in
Plan;ng
Allanblackia
contributes
a
lot
in
the
revenues
of
several
household
(whisky,
soap,
jam,
juice,
oil,
burer)
34. Country
Ac;vity
Organisa;on
Ghana
65
ha
AB
pilot
planaDon
at
Oyimso
FORM
Tanzani
a
AB
in
8
ha
tea
plantaDon
Tanzania
Tea
Estate/
Novel
Tz
Nigeria
50
ha
AB
RSSDA
(Nigeria
govt)
Pilot
plantaDons
35. Smallholder
farmers
Country
Farmers
plan;ng
AB
Seedlings
planted
Tanzania
>500
>100,000
Ghana
>200
>18,000
Cameroon
>100
Nigeria
Farmer
registraDon
in
progress
Target
of
200,000
36. Further
Opportuni;es
in
PPP
• Mango:
EvaluaDon
of
new
varieDes
together
with
juice
producers
(lab
analyses
of
fruits
on
juice
content
and
quality);
linking
mango
farmers
to
processors
• Baobab:
Assessing
the
potenDal
of
baobab
fruit
powder
for
different
applicaDons
in
the
food
industry,
e.g.
for
yoghurt
or
ice
cream
(lab
analyses
of
fruit
powders
from
different
provenances)
37. Lessons
learned/
conclusions
• Improve
linkages
between
research,
actors
in
the
value
chain
and
end-‐users
• Need
for
berer
engagement
with
markets
• Accelerate
technology
transfer
and
foster
applicaDon
by
the
private
sector
• Develop
research
projects
in
close
partnerships
with
the
private
sector/end
users
• Need
for
government
policy
support