Sierra Leone loves rice and wants to free itself from imports. But how
to do it?
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[November 21, 2024] By
JACK THOMPSON
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone (AP) — Rice borders on the sacred in Sierra
Leone. Unless a meal includes rice, people say, you haven’t eaten at
all.
But as prices soar, consumers in the West African nation are giving up
other food to buy it. That's a major reason why 83% of the population is
food insecure, according to the U.N.’s World Food Program.
In the capital, Freetown, 28-year-old nail technician Anima Mangola dug
into rice with stewed cassava leaves. “I’d eat rice five times a day if
I had me the money," she said — even as its price has more than doubled
this year.
Not everyone can keep up, and “people are suffering,” she said.
Experts blame soaring prices on a heavy reliance on imports, which
supply 35% of Sierra Leone's rice and eat up $200 million annually in
foreign currency.
Even though West Africa has a long tradition of growing rice and often
excellent places to do it, experts said the import dependency is due to
a lack of investment in agriculture, booming population growth and cheap
rice imports from Asia.
Sierra Leone's agriculture minister, Henry Kpaka Musa, accused the
International Monetary Fund of pressuring Sierra Leone in the 1980s to
stop investing in agriculture and open its markets to imports as a
condition for receiving loans.
“We used to export rice,” Kpaka said in an interview.
Now he and President Julius Bio plan to do it again. The government has
raised over $620 million from global development banks this year to work
towards food self-sufficiency, notably in rice, although Kpaka estimated
the plan will cost $1.8 billion in all. Experts from the Ivory
Coast-based research center Africa Rice have commended the plan as
“ambitious and forward-looking."
But NGOs and academics warn it will favor international agribusiness and
large-scale farms, to the detriment of the nation’s 5 million
smallholder farms. They point to similar, failed attempts at food
self-sufficiency in places such as Burkina Faso and Ghana.
Self-sufficiency challenges and potential
West Africa has an ancient rice tradition dating back an estimated back
3,500 years. Historian Judith Carney said its farmers were taken as
slaves to work plantations in the U.S. South, giving birth to a booming
rice economy.
Sierra Leone has the region's best climate and land for growing rice,
with abundant annual rainfall in coastal regions.
But Kpaka, the minister, highlighted obstacles to rice self-sufficiency:
poor roads to connect rice-growing areas with markets, unreliable
electricity for processing, climate change and poor access to finance.
With the financial backing from development banks, he has approved plans
to improve roads to the country's three main “rice bowls," create large
areas of irrigated land and provide fertilizers, seeds and pesticides to
smallholder farms.
“The plan starts with the infrastructure to attract the private sector
to come," he said. He has promoted the plan to unspecified international
investors, offering them thousands of hectares of irrigated land.
But some believe smallholders, who make up 70% of the country’s
population of 8 million, will be an afterthought.
The view from the field
Aboubacar Kowa, a farming leader in Bo district, gathered others to
discuss their rice challenges, which also included access to land and a
lack of storage, training and processing capacity.
They were united in their lack of optimism about government help.
They’ve heard these ambitious plans before.
“We don’t get support from the government,” said one smallholder and
village chief, Eric Amara Manyeh.
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Alhaji Aboubacar Kowa, Imam and farming leader, poses for a photo in
a rice field near the Sierra Leone village of Fanima, Sept. 25,
2024. (AP Photo/Jack Thompson)
The most common concern was the lack
of labor to create irrigated fields. Eliminating vegetation and
digging channels is laborious, and an exodus of young people to
urban areas means farmers have to employ laborers — a cost out of
reach for many.
Although unemployment is high in towns, Manyeh said young people
prefer easier jobs such as driving motorbike taxis.
Some farmers have formed collectives to share labor, but poor tools
slow progress. In one government-backed project in Bo, digging 60
hectares (148 acres) of channels took three months by 82 people.
A cautionary tale
Sierra Leone's goal to get chemical fertilizer, seeds and pesticides
into the hands of smallholders is meant to replicate the Green
Revolution in Asia, which increased rice production by over 100% in
two decades.
But Klara Fischer, a rural development professor at the Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences specializing in sub-Saharan
Africa, warned that the approach exposes farmers to agribusiness
giants such as Bayer Crop Science and Syngenta.
An initiative called A Green Revolution for Africa. backed by the
Gates Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation and others, has spent
over $1 billion since 2006 to increase access to fertilizers and
seeds for smallholders, but its own evaluation in 2022 said it
hasn’t increased food security. The initiative is supporting Sierra
Leone's efforts.
One recent assessment by the German development ministry in Ghana
and Burkina Faso found no evidence that providing fertilizer and
seeds increased yield or profit for smallholders, and found that 41%
of rice farmers struggled to pay off their debts.
“These fertilizer and seed packages are entangled with private
interests,” Fischer said. She also highlighted differences between
Asia in the 1970s and the current situation in Africa. One is the
cheap and available family labor in Asia compared to the rural
exodus in Sierra Leone.
Kpaka, a former employee in the Gates Foundation's agricultural
department, acknowledged concerns but was convinced his plan has the
missing ingredient to unlock growth: the critical infrastructure to
help farmers process and sell their rice, incentivizing them to grow
more.
“If we don’t make the road, (farmers) will forever remain
subsistence,” he said.
A different way
Others believe that Sierra Leone should spend its funding on
measures that empower smallholder farms rather than big business.
Joseph Randall, director of an environmental NGO in Sierra Leone,
Green Scenery, said the government should support sustainable
practices such as organic compost instead of becoming dependent on
imported chemical fertilizer, usually from Europe or North America,
which contributes heavily to global warming.
Randall opposes the distribution of modern seeds, even though they
are higher yielding. The hybrid varieties of rice can't be saved and
replanted each year because they are bred by agribusinesses and have
patents.
Meanwhile, in Manyeh’s village, thunder echoed through the chief’s
rice fields. He pointed to a swamp that might be cultivated as part
of the self-sufficiency goal.
“The willingness is there, the potential is there,” he said. But he
knows it takes more than potential to feed a nation.
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