Lameck Samson, a farmer from Thyolo District in South Malawi cycled for two hours to sell his recently harvested two bags of maize.
When he finally reached the rural Luchenza Trading Centre trading – there was only one buyer.
Posted on 02 September 2009 by IPS
Lameck Samson, a farmer from Thyolo District in South Malawi cycled for two hours to sell his recently harvested two bags of maize.
When he finally reached the rural Luchenza Trading Centre trading – there was only one buyer.
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Posted on 02 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
It was climate change that killed 10 people in Sierra Leone. The culprit was the rain that would not stop.
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Posted on 02 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
Small scale farmers across Zambia have had to stand by and helplessly watch their crops and livestock being destroyed because of the effects of climate change.
Most of the 60,000 small scale farmers belonging to Rodger Phiri’s association know exactly what climate change means – many have experienced it first hand.
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
South African biotechnology expert Wynand van der Walt headlined a panel promoting biotechnology as a solution to raising Africa’s agricultural productivity. The audience was not entirely convinced.
“Biotechnology is not a super solution to every problem in agricultural production,” Van der Walt told delegates to FANRPAN’s regional policy dialogue, but Africa faces a food security crisis and genetically engineered crops offer a way out.
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
Eighty-year-old Cecilia Makota is blessed amongst women. She is one of the few in her district who can afford seeds from a stockist in Lusaka.
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
It is good news that for the first time Africa has a united voice when it comes to climate change. But this means nothing if the continent lacks skilled negotiators to represent their standpoint at an upcoming global policy conference.
When the United Nations conference on climate change takes place this December the world will gather to finalise the way forward in tackling this issue. But because many African countries are too poor to pay for skilled negotiators…
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
Climate change is no longer just about changing temperatures and rainfall patterns: it is also about human rights.
Until now, climate change has been discussed within the domains of mining; agriculture; the environment; and industry – among others. But the effects climate change has had on people’s human rights have been ignored.
”Climate change is not purely an environmental issue; it is also not purely an agricultural policy issue…
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
Climate change was centre stage as the chair of the Food Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN), Sindiso Ngwenya, opened the network’s annual regional dialogue in Maputo, declaring, “there should be no deal without agriculture.”
Ngwenya, also the chair of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, urged over 200 delegates from 18 African countries, and the UK, U.S., Germany, the Philippines and Trinidad & Tobago…
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
The “supermarket revolution” could be on its way to African cities. But it is up to African governments to use increasing trends of urbanisation to their advantage.
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Posted on 01 September 2009 by Zahira Kharsany
Zenzele Ndebele surveys delegates at FANRPAN’s annual regional policy dialogue in Maputo, Mozambique.
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