Africa RISING looks back at what the project achieved in ‘intensifying’ agriculture in its first five years
Africa RISING is implementing activities with youthful farmers in Bababti District, northern Tanzania, to improve poultry housing and husbandry activities as an entry point to sustainable intensification (photo credit: IITA/Jonathan Odhong’).
Africa RISING—’Research In Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation’—is a multi-institutional research-for-development project involving more than 100 scientists from 11 international CGIAR centres and 39 African national agricultural research systems.
These scientists and their organizations are unpacking a wealth of credible research-based tools, products and approaches able both to enhance and to sustain the intensification of crop and livestock agriculture on the continent.
Africa RISING is implementing activities to further ‘sustainable intensification’. Agriculture is ‘intensified’ when production levels are increased for each unit of agricultural input such as labour, land, time, fertilizer, seed, feed or cash.
The products and successes generated in the first phase of this project include everything from better crop varieties to smarter cropping systems to more fertile soils to improved livestock feeding to safer foods to better household nutrition . . .
Read more about this
highly collaborative project,
which is funded by the
United States Agency
for International Development,
on the Africa RISING website
and in this new report
summarizing the achievements
of the project’s first phase:
Footprints of Africa RISING Phase I (2011–2016).