1 / 9

Africa RISING in the Ethiopian Highlands

Africa RISING in the Ethiopian Highlands. Peter Thorne International Livestock Research Institute Science Advisory Group – London 17 July, 2014. Timeline. 2011 (October) – The three Africa RISING projects are commissioned by USAID.

iona
Download Presentation

Africa RISING in the Ethiopian Highlands

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Africa RISING in the Ethiopian Highlands Peter Thorne International Livestock Research Institute Science Advisory Group – London 17 July, 2014

  2. Timeline • 2011 (October) – The three Africa RISING projects are commissioned by USAID. • 2012 (February) – Inception meeting of potential CGIAR and national partners held in Addis Ababa. • 2012 (Meher season) – six “quick win” projects implemented. In the meantime there is vigorous discussion of the contents of our overarchingResearch Framework (completed, Autumn 2012). • 2012 (November until October 2013) – Implementation of diagnostic studies (output 1 in the Research Framework). • 2013 (Meher season) – On-farm demonstrations of promising technologies (wheat, potato, faba bean, small scale irrigation). • 2014 (February – April) – Establishment of worede and kebele level innovation platforms and farmer research cluster groups. • 2014 (Meher season) – large scale implementation of on-farm action research based on revolving work plan.

  3. Diagnostic Studies • Participatory Community Analysis. • Sustainable Livelihoods Asset Evaluation. • Formalisation of indigenous agro-ecological knowledge. • Characterisationof and identification of problems and opportunities in key value chains. • Quantitative data collections for ex ante impact assessment (modeling studies). • Some more focused diagnostics, e.g. FEAST for evaluation year-round feed and fodder utilisation.

  4. Diagnostic studies: some key findings • Cropping – trends differ amongst crops and regions. Wheat, lentils and some vegetables increasing with market demand. Barley, enset and potatoes decreasing due to low prices and disease problems. • Livestock – fodder and feed supply are critical constraints to maintaining livestock numbers. • Existing community engagement – generally high levels of GO, NGO and CBO activity but can be patchy and uncoordinated. • Better engagement models (via IPs?) – AR technical innovation supported by capacity development (production, utilization, processing, leadership, marketing, communication skills). • Better engagement models – need to recognize household diversity and capitalize on opportunities for farmer – to – farmer knowledge exchange • Other shortages – appropriate, adaptable varieties, agro-chemicals, veterinary products, available water.

  5. Revolving work plan – key themes • Feed and forage development. • Field crop varietal selection and management. • Integration of high value products into mixed farming systems. • Improved land and water management for sustainability. • Improving the efficiency of mixed farming systems through more effective crop-livestock integration. • Cross-cutting problems and opportunities. • Knowledge management, exchange and capacity development. Formulated during the October 2013 planning meeting by AR core and regional partners

  6. Work plan example (theme 1)

  7. Research protocols • Anchored to research plan themes and activities. • Justification • Research methods • Deliverables (timebound) • Research outcomes • Jointly formulated amongst AR core partners. • Agreed at AR project level. • Protocol budgets consolidated into core partner budgets / contracts. • Review of protocols with AR regional partners. • Kebele level research cluster meetings for farmer engagement. • Validation of farmers selection. • Research implementation. • Monitoring and knowledge exchange (protocol teams, IPs and farmers research Cluster Groups).

  8. ILRI’s Research partners in Ethiopia • Academic institutions: • Wachemo, Mekelle, Madawolabu, DebreBerhan and Hawassa universities; MaichewAgricultural College • Regional research organizations: • Amhara Regional Agricultrural Research Institute, Southern Agricultural Research Institute, Tigray Agricultural Research Institute, OromiaAgricultural Research Institute • Federal research organizations: • Ethiopian Institute for Agricultural Research, Ethiopian Health and Nutrition Research Institute • Offices of Agriculture: • Endamekoni(Tigray), BasonaWorena (Amhara), Lemo (SNNRP) and Sinana (Oromia) • Agricultural Transformation Agency

  9. Thank You

More Related