Nuclear Techniques improving food security in Africa

Food and nutrition security — or regular access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food — continue to be challenged by often overlapping factors, including droughts, floods or harmful insects.
Nuclear techniques offer the means to help meet the growing demand for food and provide better access to healthy diets, participants agreed at an event today organized on the sidelines of the IAEA’s 66th General Conference. Delegates from Africa and other regions of the world came together to review the progress attained in the agricultural sector towards adapting to climate change on the African continent with the help of nuclear science and technology.
“The continent faces substantial challenges in
ensuring food security and improving nutrition. An even closer collaboration
across countries and institutions in the region and at the international level
is needed to address these challenges effectively,” said Hua Liu, IAEA Deputy
Director General and Head of the Department of Technical Cooperation, who
opened the event. “As the IAEA, we take a holistic and integrated approach as
we support member states through their national, regional and interregional
technical cooperation programs.”
Nuclear science and technology
in Agricultural production
The event, titled “Enhancing Capacities of Member
States in Africa to Achieve Food Security Through the Peaceful Use of Nuclear
Techniques”, included a panel discussion that brought together experts from
Germany, Kenya, Morocco, Namibia and the High-Level Steering Committee of the
AFRA Agreement to address ways in which nuclear science and technology help
increase the efficiency of agricultural production, protect soil and water
resources, ensure the safety and quality of food, and facilitate export and
trade of agricultural produce.
Experts' presentations at the event included a
case study on Namibia’s experience with drought-tolerant crops through the use
of plant mutation breeding; Morocco’s successes in agricultural soil and water
management using fallout radionuclides and the stable isotope technique;
regional initiatives on climate-smart agriculture using nuclear technology to
enhance sustainability, and human resource development in nuclear science and
technology in Africa.
“The AFRA Human Resources Development (HRD)
Committee has developed a draft strategy to substantially increase the
availability of young professionals with the technical and vocational skills
needed to implement climate-smart agriculture, deploy isotopic techniques and
produce new plant varieties using radiation technology,” said Professor James
Kahindi, Deputy Vice Chancellor at Pwani University in Kenya. “The draft HRD
policy will also connect nuclear establishments with academic institutions to
promote the work conducted with nuclear techniques and to ensure synergy
between both sectors.”
Making food healthier and
more accessible
The IAEA jointly with the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO) cooperates with more than 400 research
institutions and laboratories to support countries by providing them with the
necessary expertise, training and equipment to protect and enhance their
agricultural production and improve food and nutrition security.
By sharing knowledge and technology through its
technical cooperation program, the IAEA helps countries with implementing
nuclear and related techniques in the agricultural sector. In Uganda, for
example, experts have used plant mutation breeding to tackle brown streak
disease that endangers the root vegetable, cassava. In Nigeria, drip irrigation
systems have helped farmers to decrease water consumption by 45 per cent while
increasing yields of cucumber, watermelon and okra by 60 per cent in comparison
to other methods. In Ghana, molecular and nuclear-derived techniques have been
applied to swiftly diagnose and assist in early containing bird flu in 2018,
averting a major economic blow to the region’s poultry industry.
The IAEA has been closely cooperating with the
African Union on the applications of nuclear technology in agriculture to
support the continent of 1.4 billion people. Currently, the IAEA works with 47
African countries to increase agricultural productivity, build the resilience
of food systems to climate change, reduce greenhouse gas emissions in
agriculture and ensure food and nutrition security, considering national and
local specificities.
“While addressing the issue of food security we
must look at the entire value chain — from farm to fork,” said Najat Mokhtar,
IAEA Deputy Director General and Head of the Department of Nuclear Sciences and
Application, at the event. “Nuclear techniques play a role in food and
agriculture aiming to contribute to global food security and sustainable
agricultural development.”