JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, April 26th, 2018 -/African Media Agency (AMA) /- The Fall Army Worm (FAW) poses a serious threat to Africa’s food security and although there are solutions, the steps to take are different in each region based on a number of factors.
This means there is a lot of information to sift through when dealing with the FAW. In order to control the spread of the pest, smallholder farmers need improved access to immediate, accurate and actionable information on how to treat and protect their crops.
Given the rate of outbreak, interventions are needed at a transnational level. Information on how to treat the pest needs to be quickly transmitted to farmers and those who advise them. The problem calls for digital tools and approaches that source, analyse and translate data for farmers and relevant stakeholders to make timely and accurate decisions to combat the spread of the armyworm. Nesta, on behalf of Feed the Future, USAID, Land O’ Lakes International Development (LOL) and the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research (FFAR) have launched a prize, looking for tools and approaches that can work in different contexts across the African continent.
In this regard, five innovation outreach hubs will be hosted in cities across Africa – Johannesburg, Abidjan, Lagos, Kigali and Kampala — so that innovators can understand the finer details of the FAW Tech Prize and how to go about applying.
The US Agency for International Development (USAID), together LOL and FFAR have contributed $400,000 in prize awards, and the winners will have a chance to develop their prototypes and see immediate feedback from smallholder farmers.
Feed the Future works hand in hand with partner countries to develop their agriculture sectors and break the cycle of poverty and hunger. In particular, it hopes to increase agricultural activity, boost harvests and incomes for rural smallholder farmers, generate opportunities for economic growth and trade in developing countries.
USAID’s Digital Inclusion team believes that with advances in digital communications, social networks, satellite imagery, electronic data collection and sharing, sensing technologies, crowdsourcing, and the global movement to share open data, more information than ever can be efficiently communicated and made relevant for farmers. While digital tools are not the only solutions to FAW, technological solutions can help serve as a force multiplier to an already strained advisory service.
Media are invited to attend the innovation hub outreach event in Johannesburg
DATE: 2 May 2018
TIME: 6pm to 8pm
VENUE: Impact Hub Rosebank
Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Nesta.
For further enquiries and media interviews, kindly contact
Ms Ashley Kalinda on 0782186899.