Success Story from the BiomassWeb Project: ‘Using Cassava Peels for Mushroom Cultivation’ Project.

 By: Alice E. Dawson, Gideon N. Ashitei & Paulina S. Addy – Women in Agricultural Development (WIAD) Directorate –Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA), Ghana..

Mushroom cultivation requires a very well managed local climate which must be cool, adequately ventilated, with high humidity and optimal light. This becomes especially necessary at the cropping stage. Conventionally, small to medium scale growers achieve this by construction of thatch-roofed structures having bamboo, coconut frond or palm frond walls. Although these materials are relatively cheap and easy-to-find they tend to have a short life span and also require a lot of maintenance and repairs. The latter materials also lack the ability of protecting the mushrooms from pest attack. In addition, the floors of such mushroom cultivation structures are usually bare ground which further allows rodents/pests (which were common at the selected site) to have access into the structure to contaminate and destroy the mushrooms and bags.

Being fully aware of the challenges regarding creation of a conducive environment for mushroom cultivation and the prevailing pest situation at the current location, the project team applied a good degree of innovation and novelty in the “Using cassava peels for mushroom cultivation” Project. These constituted a prominent part of the achievements or successes of the project.

Having sustainability in mind from the very onset, corrugated roofing sheets were used for the entire mushroom house to increase its lifespan. The metallic roofing sheets however presented a challenge in respect of heat generation and this was resolved through the use of a layer of Envirotuff® immediately beneath the roof. The cropping room was further given a ceiling of plywood which had been padded with an upper layer of expandable Polystyrene to prevent heat in the room. In addition to the “brapaa” (woven palm fronds) that was used as wall material for the mushroom house in this project layers of mosquito net and wire mesh were used. The latter served the purposes of keeping out flying insects and rodents respectively in an effort to promote hygiene and strengthen the walls for durability. Again, in order to keep rodents out of the mushroom house concrete floors and three (3) courses of Sandcrete blocks were constructed to form the base of the structure.

There was an element of uncertainty in the initial stages but the project team was very pleased to have been successful in its improvisation efforts. Very good harvests were obtained from the use of these unconventional building materials for the mushroom house. Thus, the success of the novel structure will enable the project to have greater impact in the long-term as the local community will enjoy a longer use of the facility. The mushroom house will also serve as a training centre for a relatively longer period than the conventional version in aid of sustainability and tangible impact.

Currently, the Gyaman Senior High School in the immediate environs of the project site has expressed interest in taking advantage of its proximity to train students offering the Agricultural Science programme. The Director of the Gomoa-East District Agricultural Development Unit has also expressed similar interest in using the mushroom infrastructure to train farmers in other communities within the district in mushroom cultivation as an alternative livelihood skill.

The “Using Cassava Peels for Mushroom Cultivation” project is also supporting Food and Nutrition security in the local communities as their interest in mushroom consumption is on the rise. Members of the processing group have also been using some the harvest to support their nutritional needs. Some individuals in the community have requested for inoculated bags for production so that they can have regular supply from their homes. The local group has bought into the project by taking full ownership responsibility for its sustainability.

 

Edited and published by FARA

Consultancy to produce Best Practice Guidance Note

REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST
(INDIVIDUAL CONSULTANT)
RE-ADVERTISING

Consulting Services: To develop Continental Good Practice Guidance Notes based on AR4D Institutional Partnerships and Collaborative experiences of FARA, SROs and AFAAS to facilitate lesson learning and advocacy

 

Name of project:
Activity Ref No: CAADP-XP4 Output 4/ Activity 4.4.3 / 2020
Procurement Ref: FARA/CAADP-XP4/CS/IC/2020/16
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2021
  1. The Science for African Agriculture (S4AC) Consortium comprising AFAAS, ASARECA, CCARDESA, CORAF and FARA, has secured resources from the EU under the Development Smart Innovation through Research in Agriculture (DeSIRA) initiative to implement a 4-year project in Africa. The overall budget available to the S4AC consortium under this project is €30 million. This project, called CAADP Ex-Pillar 4 Africa Regional and Sub-regional Organizations for Agricultural Research and Innovation (CAADP-XP4) project will link research and innovation with development initiatives to boost the transformation of innovation in agriculture and food systems to make them more resilient to climate change and better responsive to development demands. Its objective is to enable agricultural research and innovation, including extension services, to contribute effectively to food and nutrition security, economic development and climate mitigation in Africa.
  2. The overall objective of the CAADP-XP4 is to increase the contribution of Africa’s regional and country level agriculture and food innovation systems towards achievement of climate relevant and sustainable transformation of the continent’s agriculture and food systems.
  3. The objective of this request for expression of interest is to engage a consultant to facilitate the development of a continental Good Practice Guidance Notes based on AR4D Institutional Partnerships and Collaborative experiences between FARA, SROs and AFAAS over the past two decades (in areas including; capacity development, Innovation Systems and partnerships, Technology generation and adoption, research management, leadership, Policy, knowledge management, advocacy and Communication) to facilitate Lesson learning and advocacy.
  4. As part of the responsibility, the Consultant will be assigned mainly to:
  • Design appropriate template and tools to facilitate the collection of content from these institutions identified themes.
  • Coordinate interviews of key beneficiaries and document their experiences on the agreed themes
  • Review available reports and documented lessons, experiences and good practices of these institutions on collaborative mechanisms and partnership in delivering public good.
  • Synthetize findings into a publishable document which include recommendations (including rural solutions for smallholder farmers) to strengthen AR4D governance structure in Africa.
  • Facilitate a workshop to validate and launch the final report leading to final dissemination

These tasks are detailed in the terms of reference below.

  1. The Executive Director of FARA invites interested consultants to express their interest in carrying out this assignment.
  2. Consultants interested in this call must provide an Expression of Interest no longer than 10 pages, outlining proposed methodologies, references related to the execution of similar contracts, experience in similar areas, and a proposed timeline. Brochures, CV’s, and other supplementary materials will not be included in the 10-page limit.
  3. The anticipated period of performance for this consultancy is 30 man-days expected to fully complete within a period of 6 months maximum.
  4. The consultants will be selected based upon procedures defined in the Procurement Guidelines of FARA.
  5. Interested consultants may obtain supplementary information and reference documents from Z Director of Research and Innovation, Dr. Agumya Aggrey [[email protected]] and copy the Knowledge Management & Outreach Officer, M Benjamin Abugri [[email protected]], during the following hours: 9h00 to 15h00 GMT.

 

Please download the Terms of Reference below for further information on this opportunity.

Download

  1. Expressions of Interest should be submitted electronically to [[email protected]] and addressed to Dr. Yemi Akinbamijo, Executive Director of FARA, 12 Anmeda Street, Roman Ridge, Accra, Ghana, no later than Wednesday, 10th February, 2021, at 14h00 GMT. Tel: +233 302 772823/744888
  2. FARA Affirmative Action Statement on Recruitment: there is no discrimination based on gender race, religion, ethnic orientation, disability or health status.

Executive Director of FARA

Consultancy to produce Best Practice Guidance Note

Consultancy to produce Best Practice Guidance Note

REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST
(INDIVIDUAL CONSULTANT)
RE-ADVERTISING

Consulting Services: To develop Continental Good Practice Guidance Notes based on AR4D Institutional Partnerships and Collaborative experiences of FARA, SROs and AFAAS to facilitate lesson learning and advocacy

 

Name of project:
Activity Ref No: CAADP-XP4 Output 4/ Activity 4.4.3 / 2020
Procurement Ref: FARA/CAADP-XP4/CS/IC/2020/16
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2021
  1. The Science for African Agriculture (S4AC) Consortium comprising AFAAS, ASARECA, CCARDESA, CORAF and FARA, has secured resources from the EU under the Development Smart Innovation through Research in Agriculture (DeSIRA) initiative to implement a 4-year project in Africa. The overall budget available to the S4AC consortium under this project is €30 million. This project, called CAADP Ex-Pillar 4 Africa Regional and Sub-regional Organizations for Agricultural Research and Innovation (CAADP-XP4) project will link research and innovation with development initiatives to boost the transformation of innovation in agriculture and food systems to make them more resilient to climate change and better responsive to development demands. Its objective is to enable agricultural research and innovation, including extension services, to contribute effectively to food and nutrition security, economic development and climate mitigation in Africa.
  2. The overall objective of the CAADP-XP4 is to increase the contribution of Africa’s regional and country level agriculture and food innovation systems towards achievement of climate relevant and sustainable transformation of the continent’s agriculture and food systems.
  3. The objective of this request for expression of interest is to engage a consultant to facilitate the development of a continental Good Practice Guidance Notes based on AR4D Institutional Partnerships and Collaborative experiences between FARA, SROs and AFAAS over the past two decades (in areas including; capacity development, Innovation Systems and partnerships, Technology generation and adoption, research management, leadership, Policy, knowledge management, advocacy and Communication) to facilitate Lesson learning and advocacy.
  4. As part of the responsibility, the Consultant will be assigned mainly to:
  • Design appropriate template and tools to facilitate the collection of content from these institutions identified themes.
  • Coordinate interviews of key beneficiaries and document their experiences on the agreed themes
  • Review available reports and documented lessons, experiences and good practices of these institutions on collaborative mechanisms and partnership in delivering public good.
  • Synthetize findings into a publishable document which include recommendations (including rural solutions for smallholder farmers) to strengthen AR4D governance structure in Africa.
  • Facilitate a workshop to validate and launch the final report leading to final dissemination

These tasks are detailed in the terms of reference below.

  1. The Executive Director of FARA invites interested consultants to express their interest in carrying out this assignment.
  2. Consultants interested in this call must provide an Expression of Interest no longer than 10 pages, outlining proposed methodologies, references related to the execution of similar contracts, experience in similar areas, and a proposed timeline. Brochures, CV’s, and other supplementary materials will not be included in the 10-page limit.
  3. The anticipated period of performance for this consultancy is 30 man-days expected to fully complete within a period of 6 months maximum.
  4. The consultants will be selected based upon procedures defined in the Procurement Guidelines of FARA.
  5. Interested consultants may obtain supplementary information and reference documents from Z Director of Research and Innovation, Dr. Agumya Aggrey [[email protected]] and copy the Knowledge Management & Outreach Officer, M Benjamin Abugri [[email protected]], during the following hours: 9h00 to 15h00 GMT.

 

Please download the Terms of Reference below for further information on this opportunity.

Download

  1. Expressions of Interest should be submitted electronically to [[email protected]] and addressed to Dr. Yemi Akinbamijo, Executive Director of FARA, 12 Anmeda Street, Roman Ridge, Accra, Ghana, no later than Wednesday, 10th February, 2021, at 14h00 GMT. Tel: +233 302 772823/744888
  2. FARA Affirmative Action Statement on Recruitment: there is no discrimination based on gender race, religion, ethnic orientation, disability or health status.

Executive Director of FARA

Consultancy to produce Best Practice Guidance Note

Consultancy on the ‘Flagship Publication of Africa Status Report on Research and Innovation’ – AfARR

REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST
(INDIVIDUAL CONSULTANT)
RE-ADVERTISING

Consulting Services: Consultancy on the ‘Flagship Publication of Africa Status Report on Research and Innovation’ – AfARR
Name of project:


Activity Ref No: CAADP-XP4 Output 4/ Activity 4.4.2 / 2020
Procurement Ref: FARA/CAADP-XP4/CS/IC/2020/15
Date: Wednesday, January 13, 2021

1. The Science for African Agriculture (S4AC) Consortium comprising AFAAS, ASARECA, CCARDESA, CORAF and FARA, has secured resources from the EU under the Development Smart Innovation through Research in Agriculture (DeSIRA) initiative to implement a 4-year project in Africa. The overall budget available to the S4AC consortium under this project is €30 million. This project, called CAADP Ex-Pillar 4 Africa Regional and Sub-regional Organizations for Agricultural Research and Innovation (CAADP-XP4) project will link research and innovation with development initiatives to boost the transformation of innovation in agriculture and food systems to make them more resilient to climate change and better responsive to development demands. Its objective is to enable agricultural research and innovation, including extension services, to contribute effectively to food and nutrition security, economic development and climate mitigation in Africa.

2. The overall objective of the CAADP-XP4 is to increase the contribution of Africa’s regional and country level agriculture and food innovation systems towards achievement of climate relevant and sustainable transformation of the continent’s agriculture and food systems.

3. The objective of this request for expression of interest is to engage a consultant to develop, validate and launch a detailed strategy, guidelines and template to guide the production of the main flagship report dubbed “Africa Status Report on Research and Innovation (AfARR)”.

4. As part of the responsibility, the Consultant will be assigned mainly to:

(i) Develop the scope and content required to produce the first AfARR (Including content submission template to guide authors, annotated chapters, cover design, etc).
(ii) Identify authors for the various contents (theme/chapters) of the publication, possible source of data, design, publishers, and other relevant processes required of a Flagship report.
(iii) Set up an International Editorial Team (IED) for AfARR.
(iv) Identify users of the report and how the final report will be disseminated.
(v) Design a programme of activities with timelines on how the first edition will be conducted.
(vi) Organize a validation workshop for the content requirement of AfARR.
(vii) Finalize document and draft a programme for the launch of the first AfARR by June 2021.
These tasks are detailed in the terms of reference below.

5. The Executive Director of FARA invites interested consultants to express their interest in carrying out this assignment.

6. Consultants interested in this call must provide an Expression of Interest no longer than 10 pages, outlining proposed methodologies, references related to the execution of similar contracts, experience in similar areas, and a proposed timeline. Brochures, CV’s, and other supplementary materials will not be included in the 10-page limit.

7. The anticipated period of performance for this consultancy is 30 man-days expected to fully complete within a period of 4 months maximum.

8. The consultants will be selected based upon procedures defined in the Procurement Guidelines of FARA.

9. Interested consultants may obtain supplementary information and reference documents from the Director of Research and Innovation, Dr. Aggrey Agumya [[email protected]] and copy the Knowledge Management & Outreach Officer, Mr. Benjamin Abugri [[email protected]], during the following hours: 9h00 to 15h00 GMT.

Please download the Terms of Reference below for further information on this opportunity.

Download

10. Expressions of Interest should be submitted electronically to [[email protected]] and addressed to Dr. Yemi Akinbamijo, Executive Director of FARA, 12 Anmeda Street, Roman Ridge, Accra, Ghana, no later than Wednesday, 10th February, 2021, at 14h00 GMT. Tel: +233 302 772823/744888

11. FARA Affirmative Action Statement on Recruitment: there is no discrimination based on gender race, religion, ethnic orientation, disability or health status.

Executive Director of FARA

Advances In Knowledge Management & Outreach for Enhancing the Impact Of Research And Innovation in the COVID era. The FARADataInformS Example

According to the World Economic Forum (2015), Africa produces only 2.6% of global scientific knowledge with just 29 publications per million inhabitants compared to 1,013 and 609 for North America and Europe respectively. 64.6% of these publications are co-authored with researchers from other continents. The continent has just 79 scientists per million  inhabitants compared to countries like Brazil and United States where the ratio stands at 656 and 4,500, respectively (UNESCO Science Report – Towards 2030). Currently, Africa’s contribution to the global knowledge system is among the lowest in the world. This is mainly due to the low institutional and individual knowledge generation capacity on one hand, and the weak institutional capacity and infrastructure for collecting, storing and managing the data and information being generated on the other. Informed decision-making processes at all levels are weak due to low availability and accessibility of relevant and reliable data, information or knowledge.

FARA and her constituents (national and sub-regional) have emerged as credible knowledge institutions and have over the years generated relevant science, technology and innovation knowledge needed for the transformation of African agriculture. FARA knowledge products and systems cover areas of human capital, competences/skills, job opportunities, educational programmes, policy, Innovations systems and partnerships, rural farming and farming systems, continental initiatives, knowledge management and advocacy, among others.  In agreement with Young 2005, FARA’s knowledge systems outreach over the years has brought together people in millions (researchers, policy analysts, development practitioners, decision makers and other stakeholders), organizations (universities, National research Institutes including other government agencies, NGOs and Private [farmer) sector groups) and the knowledge that is accumulated and shared among them (results of research analysis, information on synthesis and trends, demand and supply of capacities and local knowledge and expertise).

The Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) is the apex organization for agricultural research for development in Africa. The completion of the implementation of various strategies over the past two decades, presaged the development of a new strategy in the year 2018 to consolidate the significant gains over the years. Lessons learnt and god practices from past interventions led to the establishment of a strong and effective information and knowledge management and outreach system that offers access to knowledge and decision support solutions for stakeholders in Africa especially on capacities, policies, practices, technologies and innovative funding instruments  as well as establishing appropriate frameworks and guidelines for integrating the Science Agenda (S3A) into CAADP and STISA 2024 processes and strategies. These are aimed at improving productivity, competitiveness and integration of the agricultural sector; Strengthened policy, technical and institutional capacities of national and regional stakeholders to design and implement programs of the science agenda; and build/strengthen innovation systems and partnerships among national and regional stakeholders as well as develop partners to facilitate multi-stakeholder engagement, dialogue and resource support for the implementation of the Science Agenda for Agriculture in Africa.

To effectively provide science, technology and innovation (STI) knowledge support to the CAADP country process and for the implementation of the Malabo Declaration for 2025, FARA and partners developed the FARADataInformS; a repository that repositions existing platforms as well as create the opportunity for introducing new data and pulling data from third party sources. It was also in response to demand by FARA constituents during the S3A regional and national consultations held in Rwanda, Malawi, Ghana and Senegal of over 40 countries in 2017, that FARA needs to continue to strengthen its knowledge management systems and infrastructure to help bridge the research and policy gap, provide foresight and to domesticate African data, information and knowledge to support decision making and advocacy at all levels.

FARADataInformS serves as a continental repository and observatory of relevant Science and Technology Indicators (STI) metrics with analytical features for agriculture at country level serving as the basic resource from which various information services and products are derived. FARADataInformS integrates existing databases in FARA and develops a continental strategy for data capture and analysis to populate and update the FARADataInformS within the African agricultural innovation system (AAIS).

For cost effective and sustainable data capture strategy, FARA has partnered with the National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) and other existing data collection institutions within the countries such as the statistical services and chambers of commerce. In addition, FARA is using its various networks and interns as sources of data collection from the countries.  FARA continues to build specific partnerships with other international and continental organizations operating similar data systems using their comparative advantages and subsidiary principle including SROs, AOSTI, PANAP, EC-DeSIRA, FAOSTATS, The World Bank data amongst others to continue to strengthen this agenda.

Tools Offered by FARADataInformS in the Mist of COVID-19

FARA is a thought leader in AR4D. Over the years, FARA has created important networks and led major continental discussions focused on solutions to the huge knowledge gap. These resulted in the development of major knowledge tools and the creation of relevant Communities of Practice (CoPs). These tools include the eCapacities, the Regional Agricultural Information and Learning System (eRAILS), the Innovation Platform Agribusiness Portal (IPAbP), the PAEPARD and the BiomassNet portals. FARA maintains a Library (Hardcopy & online) whereas all CoPs were established using the Dgroups. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, these have been leveraged by Africa AR4D partners to brainstorm on measures aimed at mitigating the effects of the pandemic on Africa Food Security.

The eCapacities is an online marketplace for the demand and supply of capacities in strategic human capital formation. The platform provides a real-time review of the levels of capacity and demand in each participating country and dynamically estimating the capacity gaps for use in priority setting and targeting of investments. e-Capacities connects training providers, workplaces and graduates, and allows them to interact with each other in contextualized and mutually beneficial ways. Currently being implemented in Kenya, Ghana, Zambia and Uganda as Tier 1 countries, the portal has registered over 100 training providers with hundreds of programmes posted, 80 workplaces and over 10,000 graduates and employees data captured. This is a platform provides critical opportunities and solutions, particularly in the mist of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The eRAILS online platform developed in 2009, facilitates the mobilization of relevant local solutions to agriculture particularly research outputs, local knowledge and experiences from African stakeholders for knowledge sharing. It is a dynamic, decentralized, robust and versatile system that provides equitable access to a web-based agricultural information to both individuals and institutions, to establish websites to facilitate active interaction among themselves and other interested users across Africa and beyond towards building a knowledge-based economy for Africa. Implemented in over 45 African countries, coordinated by the SROs and owned by NARES, eRAILS has so far provided access to about 1,231 accounts, 1,894 websites and over 7,164 webpages. The IFAD Rural Solution portal also provides similar opportunities.

The IPAbP is a web information repository which aggregates information for all the Innovation Platforms in Africa to foster linkages with other agricultural innovation organizations, donors and development partners; to facilitate access to information and solutions on platforms to enhance collaboration and develop big businesses. It offers different IP facilitators an opportunity to demonstrate their Innovations and other products to a wider audience. Its analytics component further provides development partners, policy makers and agriculture stakeholders an avenue to directly source data on availability and veracity of all Innovation Platforms on the continent. Over 430 IPs across Africa have registered and are sharing knowledge and good practices on the portal.

Whiles the PAEPARD platform facilitates multi-stakeholder partnerships between Africa and Europe in the field of agricultural research for development (ARD) using the User-Led Approach, it is the hub that provides access to all relevant funding opportunities and upcoming events for AR4D stakeholders in Africa. In the same vain, the BiomassNet provides an interactive network for practitioners, policy makers, scientists, and other experts interested in knowledge sharing and dissemination of information concerning biomass in Africa.

Dgroups is a professional open-space collaboration tool that offers users the opportunity to contribute to dialogue and decision-making for international development. Supported by the monthly Information Sharing and Technical Seminars, FARA’s Dgroup has over the years offered various stakeholders in AR4D an effective and efficient knowledge dissemination and collaboration mechanisms. The over 10 Dgroup Communities of Practice of FARA currently reaches out to more than 50,000 individuals/stakeholders from diverse agricultural interest backgrounds in all 55 African countries and to over 131 countries globally. In the mist of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dgroups remain the most important collaborative tool for the majority of AR4D actors in Africa. FARA has held more than 30 discussions addressing important interventions in policy, foresight, capacity development, innovation systems, knowledge and solutions, partnerships and relevant topics involving the AU, NEPAD/AUDA,, AFAAS, CCARDESA, CORAF, ASARECA and other key players within the Africa AR4D. You may also register HERE to be part of this  important assembly of AR4D actors.

FARA currently operates both hardcopy (over 5,000 books) and online libraries. Through its four publication mechanisms (FARA Research Report -FRR, FARA Dissemination Notes – FDNs, FARA Policy Briefs Series – FPBS and FARA Flagship Publication – AfARR), FARA continues to provide opportunities for African researchers to publish their knowledge products for wider outreach.

The development of the FARADataInformS marks the beginning of an important coordinated effort aimed at achieving greater integration, foresight and harmonization of Africa’s knowledge systems for AR4D and the S3A as demonstrated during the COVID-19 pandemic. FARADataInformS will continue to establish and sustain itself as the most credible and reliable portal, working closely with the NARS, SROs, AFAAS and other key partners, offering countries an added opportunity for greater collaboration, learning and sharing.  It will continue to build stronger partnerships and outreach with relevant stakeholders at the National level and other continental and sub-continental institutions.

By: Benjamin Abugri (Knowledge Management & Outreach Officer)