Feature by Prosper K.
Kuorsoh
Background
Wa, March 13, – Waking up at
cockcrow every dawn for him is not a choice, but a matter of survival. Even in
the 21st century, he is still a bosom friend of the hoe and cutlass by
circumstances.
Though, a very hard working man,
he is highly challenged with the difficulty of producing to meet family
consumption needs through the hoe and cutlass way.
Producing enough for the market
to meet family income needs is a nightmare that has taken the best part of his
sleep since he assumed responsibility of providing for his family.
That is the story of Oscar Dong,
a 45-year-old smallholder farmer from Guo, a farming community in the Wa West
District of the Upper West Region.
Concerns
With a family size of six, Oscar
Dong will have to manage with the 220 tubers of yam, six bags of maize, one bag
of beans and one and a half bags of millet he got from his about six acres of
farm land.
“This is already not adequate to
sustain my family till the next harvesting season, let alone talking of sending
some to the market to sell for income”, he lamented.
Oscar Dong’s inability to produce
enough to meet his family consumption and income needs through the hoe and
cutlass way is not really his biggest headache, but the significant quantities
wasted to a monster known as Post Harvest Losses (PHLs).
He often observed with worry as
he loses his grains to inappropriate means of harvesting, threshing, winnowing
and storage as well as poor market prices.
Lack of an appropriate storage
facility compelled him to compete with rodents for his little tubers of yam.
These rodents according to him often have the better part of his yam.
“Sometimes, when I store my
grains, they get rotten in the sacks”, he said and attributed it to the too
much heat in his bed room where he stored the grains in sacks.
“Each year this happen to me, my
fate and that of my family is always left in the cruel hands of hunger”, he
further lamented.
There are thousands of
smallholder farmers that are in similar situations or are even in worse
situations in the Wa West District and the Upper West Region by extension.
Findings
A World Food Programme (WFP) 2012
Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis Report indicates that
1.4 per cent of the total population of the Upper West Region is severely food
insecure and 22.3 per cent are moderately food insecure while 76.3 percent are
said to be food secured.
Studies by the Council for
Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), suggests that Ghana loses over US$400
million annually to PHLs. The impact is mainly in cereals (maize, rice), roots
and tubers (cassava, yam) and other crops.
According to the CSIR, the
situation is widespread across Ghana.
Again, Ghana loses about 318,514
tonnes of maize annually to post-harvest losses according to a 2016 study by Dr
Bruno Tran, an expert in PHLs management with the Africa PHLs Information
System (APHLIS).
This figure represents 18 per
cent of the country’s annual maize production and Northern Region is the
largest contributor with 20,411 tonnes annually followed by Upper East Region
and Volta Region which also contributes 13,000 tonnes and 8,983 tonnes
respectively.
Upper West, Brong Ahafo and
Central Regions are the least contributors with 778 tonnes, 734 tonnes and 636
tonnes respectively. According to Dr Tran most of the maize is lost because the
farmers fail to dry it thoroughly before storage.
The study further revealed that
major crops in the region that suffer post-harvest losses include; maize,
sorghum, rice, groundnuts, cowpea, vegetables (tomato, okra and green leaves)
and yam.
According to the survey “These
produce are therefore sold immediately after harvest and in the circumstance
farmers earned little”.
Another study on PHLs of maize
along the chain in the Sissala East and Sissala West Districts in 2015 by a
student of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST)
revealed that more than 50 percent of maize produced was lost due to poor
post-harvest handling.
Again, another research conducted
in 2013 by the Urban Association Limited (TUAL) on PHLs of selected food crops
in 11 African countries including; Ghana…..revealed that almost half of food
crops produced in the country do not make it to the consumer.
According to the report, as much
as 60 per cent of yam produced in Ghana, for instance, did not make it to the
final consumer, revealing that the level of losses occurring in maize
production, ranged between 5-70 percent.
Between 11-27 per cent and 5-15
per cent of rice and millet/sorghum cultivated never made it to the consumer,
says Mr. Emmanuel Sasu Yeboah, Upper West Regional Director of Agriculture.
He hinted that sucking buds were
the major cause of groundnuts PHLs.
Mr. Yeboah mentioned harvesting,
shelling, cleaning, sorting and grading, packaging, storage and transportation
as critical areas that affect post-harvest quality or losses of farm produce.
He said farmers in the region
have still not achieved their maximum potential in spite of several
interventions and attributed it to high PHLs.
Mr Yeboah recommended that
research should provide appropriate scientific know-how on post-harvest
handling and preservation methods of food crops to farmers especially during
harvesting, transportation and storage to reduce mechanical injury.
Policy makers and entrepreneurs
should invest in roads, storage and processing infrastructure, he said.
Presenting a paper titled
“Conceptualising the Economic, Social and Environmental Costs of PHLs of
Agricultural Commodities in Africa” at the Netherlands Development Organisation
SNV/Regional Strategic Analysis and Knowledge Support System (ReSAKSS) in West
Africa/University for Development Studies (UDS) Symposium on Incidence of PHLs
in Northern Ghana, Professor Saa Dittoh, Department of Climate Change and Food
Security, UDS, Nyankpala Campus – Tamale, said PHLs described loss of
agricultural commodities including crops, fish and animal products such as
meat, milk and eggs between harvests and consumption.
He explained that PHLs was
usually divided into food loss and food waste with food loss occurring mainly
as a result of lack of adequate infrastructure such as inadequate storage and
transportation among others and/or lack of careful handling at all points along
the value chain.
Food waste, he said refers to
loss of edible food due to human action or lack of action such as waste of
cooked foods at funerals and wedding ceremonies, over-consumption of food
(resulting in overweight and obesity) among others.
Prof. Dittoh noted that PHL
research and discussions have focused on crops, usually cereals and grain
legumes, but that there were considerable losses in almost all agricultural
commodities in Africa and elsewhere.
Also post-harvest losses in
fruits and vegetables are about 50 percent and about 40 percent in roots and
tubers as well as 20 percent losses in cereals, he said.
Prof Dittoh noted that PHLs have
been a problem in Ghanaian and African agricultural systems over a long period
of time, adding that it often occurred after valuable resources have been
expended in producing the commodities.
“It is surprising there has not
been much research emphasis or interventions to reduce and mitigate PHLs”, he
said.
It is reported that 95 percent of
the research investments world-wide in the past 30 years have focused on
increasing productivity and only five percent directed towards reducing losses
(Kader, 2005; Kader and Roller, 2004; WFLO, 2010).
Food losses do not only reduce
food available for human consumption, but also causes negative externalities
(environmental degradation).
“Both quantitative and
qualitative PHLs are too costly to be ignored”, he said and added that food
losses contributed to high food prices by removing part of the food supply from
the market; and such is PHLs in market value terms.
A further complication was that
if farmers were very careful to avoid physical and qualitative PHLs at
production and transportation sections of the value chain only to face a glut,
it resulted in PHLs, he said.
That suggested that effective
reduction of PHLs was dependent on an effective and sustainable value chain,
Prof. Dittoh pointed out and indicated that improved access to remunerative
markets was key to significant and successful reduction of PHLs.
Mr. Emmanuel Wullo Wullingdool,
Policy Officer, Ghana Trade and Livelihood Coalition (GTLC) said PHLs has an
effect on farmers with the negative effect overriding the positive effect.
Recommendations
On what needs to be done to
reduce or eliminate PHL impact on Smallholder farmers, Mr. Wullingdool suggested
training to enhance the skills of the farmers on post-harvest handling to
reduce losses occurring due to poor handling.
He also suggested increase in
extension advice to farmers through the training of more Agricultural Extension
Agents (AEAs) while emphasising on access and availability of credit at cheaper
interest rates to farmers to enable them purchase appropriate PHL technologies
for storage.
Again, appropriate means of
transport coupled with motorable roads from the farm gate to storage facilities
and to market centres must be available and the provision of improved storage
facilities such as ware houses, Silos, Purdue Improved Crop Storage (PIC) sacks
and sun/solar drying methods would help smallholder farmers to reduce PHLs.
Furthermore, Mr. Wullingdool
suggested the processing of excess farm produce to allow for longer storage,
ready market for farmers to sell their produce to prevent the situation where
farmers inappropriately store produce due to lack of ready market prices only
for the produce to get spoilt.
While calling on central
government to increase its budgetary allocation to both Regional and District
Departments of Agriculture on time to enable them work to meet the interest of
the farmers, Mr. Wullingdool also suggested to Metropolitan, Municipal and
District Assemblies (MMDAs) to incorporate PHL management into their various
Medium Term Development Plans (MTDPs).
MMDAs, he said also need to set
aside a percentage of their Internally Generated Fund (IGF) to tackle issues of
PHLs in their respective districts.
Mr. Wullingdool also proposed a
multi-agency approach to addressing the issue of PHLs, stressing that the
Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA) alone could not address PHLs
The GTLC Policy Officer said it
was based on the negative implications of PHLs on smallholder farmers that the
Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV) initiated the Voice for Change (V4C)
project.
The project, he said seeks to
generate evidence, build capacity of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) to
engage in evidence base advocacy to draw the attention of policy makers to the
issue of PHLs, sustainable nutrition for all, Water and Sanitation Hygiene
(WASH) and the use of clean energy to reduce household pollution.
Until the monster known as PHLs
is ruthlessly fought and completely eradicated, it will continue to put the
fate of thousands of smallholder farmers in the hands of the cruel hands of
hunger.
GNA

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