Report show organic
farming in sub-Saharan Africa is proving successful
A long term
study in Kenya shows that organic farming is productive, economically viable
and resource conserving
A recent publication in the journal "Agriculture Ecosystems and
Environment" shows the results of maize-based conventional and organic
farming systems over the first six years of two long-term field trials in Chuka
and Thika in the central highlands of Kenya. The study was carried out by the
Research Institute of Organic Agriculture (FiBL) in close cooperation with
partners in Kenya.
Both farming systems were compared
at input levels of commercial, export-oriented production (high) and at those
of smallholder farmers (low). At each level, the farming systems were
fertilized with the same amount of nitrogen and phosphorus, the conventional
one with farmyard manure and mineral fertilizer, the organic one with compost,
ash and rock phosphate. The researchers from FiBL and its Kenyan partners show
that after a three-year conversion phase, crop yields from high-input organic
systems were similar to those of high-input conventional systems in Chuka and
Thika. Despite higher production costs, the profitability of organic farming
reached 1.3 to 4.1 times the profitability of conventional systems after the
fifth year of conversion to organic due to premium prices. In the low-input
systems at Thika, sole maize cropping produced three times higher maize yield
in conventional compared to organic, but, when intercropped with beans, the
maize yields were similar.
The study also revealed that
nutrient balances on both sites were negative in the low-input systems as well
as in the conventional high-input system. So these systems are mining for soil
nutrients. The positive balance found in the organic high-input system was due
to the common practice of leaving crop residues in the field. Therefore, the
study suggests revisiting the fertilizer recommendations for small-scale
farmers to secure yields and for export-oriented farmers to improve management
practices to conserve resources. The findings demonstrate that high-input
organic farming is productive, economically viable, resource-conserving and can
contribute to sustainable agricultural production in Kenya and the regions in
sub-Saharan Africa that have environmental conditions similar to Chuka and
Thika.
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