As former UN and current African Union Food Systems Envoys, we have firsthand experience of the complex challenges confronting Africa’s food systems. 

Despite the continent’s abundant natural resources, it needs help with food insecurity and malnutrition. The combined impacts of climatic shocks, COVID-19, and civil unrest further exacerbate these vulnerabilities, emphasising the urgent need for reforms to ensure food security across Africa. 

The recent El Niño phenomenon in Zambia, Malawi, and Zimbabwe is expected to reduce maize yields significantly. A projected decline of 5% from 2.3 MT/Ha in marketing year 2023/24 would mark a five-year low in productivity for Zambia. These examples highlight the fragility of Africa’s food systems and the challenges they present.

While Southern Africa faces a looming food crisis, a brighter picture emerges in Eastern Africa. Due to improved rainfall and production, the region boasts a projected net surplus of 1.7 million MT of maize for 2023/24. 

Tanzania leads the pack with an exportable surplus expected to be 36% above average (1.1 million MT), while Uganda and Ethiopia are on track for typical levels (450,000 MT and 400,000 MT, respectively). This surplus could be strategically traded within Southern Africa during deficit seasons.  

Africa, with its vast arable land and varied climates, has the potential to not only be self-sufficient but also become a major contributor to global food security. However, unlocking this potential hinges on tackling structural issues and investing in sustainable agricultural practices

Africa’s food systems require a critical shift towards resilience. Extreme weather like droughts, floods, and desertification pose real threats, causing crop failures and devastating livelihoods. Systemic interventions are crucial to counter these risks. Drought-resistant crops, improved water management, soil conservation techniques, and sustainable land use are all urgent priorities.  

Furthermore, rain-fed agriculture leaves smallholder farmers exposed.  Investing in scalable solutions like small-scale irrigation and promoting water-efficient practices can mitigate these risks and ensure sustainable yields for these vital producers.

Addressing Global Crisis of Food Loss and Waste: Sustainable Solutions and Strategies in Africa

Beyond climate shocks, inefficiencies plague Africa’s food chain. Staggering post-harvest losses exceeding 35% stem from inadequate storage and transportation. Addressing these can boost farm earnings by over 20% in a single season. 

However, this requires targeted policies and investments in cold storage, transport infrastructure, and market linkages. By ensuring food reaches markets in good quality, these interventions incentivise private sector investment, extending shelf life and guaranteeing markets for farmers’ yields.  

This approach, proven to encourage smart technologies and crop diversification, is the key to attracting youth participation in value addition. Empowering smallholder farmers to become thriving businesses remains a viable path to rural economic growth, improved livelihoods, and social inclusion.

Africa urgently needs transformative policies and investments to create resilient, inclusive food systems. National, regional, and international collaboration is crucial, with governments, civil society, and the private sector working in unison. This aligns with the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development (CAADP) post-Malabo process, which envisions food system transformations beyond 2025.

As former UN Food Systems Envoys and current Africa Food Systems Champions, proven innovations are key. We invite you to nominate individuals or firms tackling Africa’s food system bottlenecks through their work. 

The Africa Food Prize of over $100,000 awaits the winner, announced at the Africa Food Systems Forum in September 2024. Be the change! Nominate now; applications close at the end of May 2024.

Dr Ibrahim Mayaki is the current Africa Union’s Special Envoy on Food Systems and a Member of the Africa Food Prize Committee. Dr Agnes Kalibata is the former UN Food Secretary General’s Special Envoy on Food Systems, the President of AGRA, and a former Winner of the Yara Prize and now the Africa Food Prize. 


 

Khusoko provides market insights into Africa's business investment as well as global trends that impact East African businesses.

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