Drought tolerant maize to hugely benefit Africa-study

ABIDJAN,  (Reuters) – Distributing new varieties of  drought tolerant maize to African farmers could save more than  $1.5 billion dollars, boost yields by up to a quarter and lift  some of the world’s poorest out of poverty, a study found.

The study published on Thursday by the Mexico-based  International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT), with  input from other food research institutes, focused on 13 African  countries in which it has been handing out drought tolerant  maize to farmers over the past four years.

It described maize as “the most important cereal crop in  Africa”, a lifeline to 300 million vulnerable people.

The Drought Tolerant Maize for Africa plan aims to hasten  the adoption of maize varieties that withstand dry weather.

“The vision of this project is to generate by 2016 drought  tolerant maize that … increases the average productivity of  maize under smallholder farmer conditions by 20-30 percent on  adopting farms (and) reaches 30-40 million people.”

It also aims to add an annual average of $160 – $200 million  worth of additional grain to Africa’s harvest, it said.

Wilfred Mwangi, a Kenyan agricultural economist on the  project, said the drought resistant maize shows comparative  yields that beat other varieties even if there’s no drought.

“We are saying that comparing with whatever farmers are  growing now, these varieties will outperform what they are  doing,” he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Africa’s droughts are worsening.

Many scientists blame climate change they say is linked to  human emissions of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, but  climate talks since last year have failed to yield binding  emissions targets, thrusting climate adaptation to the fore.