700,000 Ghanaian farmers to benefit from crop technologies
About 700,000 farmers in Ghana are to benefit from the introduction of improved varieties of cereal and tuber crops, developed by research scientists in the West African sub-region in the first phase of the West Africa Agricultural Productivity Programme (WAAPP).
The scientists developed 31 new technologies for the production of cassava, yam, coco yam, maize and other cereals, which when adopted for cultivation would increase yield by about 15 per cent.
Mr. Emmanuel Alorigiya, Communication Officer of the Project Coordinating Unit of WAAPP, made these known at a day’s awareness creation workshop, organized for agricultural officers, farmers and media personnel in the Upper West Region, at Wa on Tuesday, as a prelude to the implementation of the second phase of the Programme.
The first phase of WAAPP, which began in March 2008 in Ghana, Mali and Senegal, was expanded to cover ten other West African countries.
The World Bank sunk 15 million dollars into the programme in Ghana during the first phase, which ended in December 2012, and has earmarked 60 million dollars for the implementation of the second phase in Ghana for the next five years.
WAAPP was initiated by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) with financial support from the World Bank, aimed at improving agricultural productivity by emphasizing sub-regional integration to promote shared growth and reduce poverty.
Mr. Alorigiya, said remarkable progress was made in the past five years, during which major projects were successfully implemented under WAAPP.
He said the inclusion of Ghana Mali and Senegal in the second phase was as result of the achievements made in the first phase of the programme.
Mr. Aloriyiga asked farmers to embrace the new technologies and take ownership of the project and make it successful.
Mr. Joseph Faalong, Upper West Regional Director of Agriculture, in a speech read on his behalf, said workshops were being organized in the Upper East, Upper West and Northern regions to highlight the remarkable achievements of the first phase of WAAPP and to make the project more visible nationally.
He said the new varieties of maize and cassava developed by WAAPP would be released to farmers soon.
Source: GNA