Platform for African – European Partnership in Agricultural Research for Development

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Advancing Neglected and Underutilized Species (NUS) Education Across Africa


15 – 17 July 2026.
Entebbe. The Open-Source NUS Curriculum – Developing Course Assets for Asynchronous Online Courses Workshop is a three-day curriculum development workshop jointly organized by RUFORUM, GFAiR, and the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT. The workshop aims to transform the competency-based curriculum on Neglected and Underutilized Species (NUS) into a complete set of high-quality, open-source digital learning resources that can be delivered asynchronously by universities across Africa. Participants work collaboratively to develop standardized course assets, including course overviews, lesson notes, multimedia resources, readings, assignments, knowledge checks, and documentation of remaining curriculum gaps.

The workshop follows a structured Curriculum Asset Completion Process (CACP) built around seven registers that guide participants from curriculum mapping to final handover. Emphasis is placed on ensuring that the curriculum aligns with labour market needs, competency-based education principles, and quality standards for online learning. 

By the end of the workshop, participating universities are expected to have completed and peer-reviewed the core digital assets required to build an open-access Bachelor's and Master's curriculum on Neglected and Underutilized Species, supporting wider adoption of NUS education across the RUFORUM network and beyond.

  • Dr. Florence Nakayiwa Opening remarks; closing remarks; overall workshop leadership.
  • Dr. Mary Kulabako Participant introductions and team assignments.
  • Dr. Peter Kigwilu Workshop flow, roles and expectations; Curriculum Asset Completion Process (CACP); online lesson note development; daily debriefs; curriculum finalization; formal handover of curriculum assets.
  • Emmanuel Okalany Aligning the NUS curriculum with labour market needs and employability.
  • Dr. Bernadette Kiarie Developing quality course assets for asynchronous learning; competency-based online pedagogy; assessment design; workshop coordination; post-workshop action planning.
  • Block Leads with Subject Matter Expert (SME) Teams - Review of course mapping, competencies and learning outcomes; validation of modules; development of course assets.
  • Block Teams and Instructional Designers (IDs) - Preparation of course overviews, reading lists, multimedia resources, lesson notes, assignments and knowledge checks.
  • Lead SMEs- Team presentations showcasing completed curriculum assets, identifying remaining gaps, and signing off curriculum packages.

Upcoming:

 Africa launch webinar and consolidation of results for global synthesis and reporting (October)


Obituary


Remembering the late Dr Cris Muyunda (CEO, Alliance for Commodity Trade in Eastern and Southern Africa - ACTESA):  Dr Muyunda’s interests stretched beyond conventional value chains. He championed the role of wild and indigenous foods — such as tamarind — in African food security, arguing that trees and forests are vital not only as food sources but for the ecosystem services they provide to agriculture locally and globally.

Why the Global NARS Consortium (GNC) Matters More Than Ever



We keep mistaking income for impact.
Visibility for value.
Short-term success for long-term contribution.

A content creator may earn more than a professor.
A trader may earn more than an agricultural scientist.

But no nation—and no civilization—has ever prospered without research.

Improved crop varieties, climate-smart farming, vaccines, antibiotics, drought-resistant seeds, sustainable livestock systems, and food innovations all began with researchers asking difficult questions long before anyone applauded.

A country that neglects its researchers today will depend on someone else's innovations tomorrow.

This is why the Global NARS Consortium (GNC), facilitated by the Global Forum on Agricultural Research and Innovation (GFAiR), is so important.

Around the world, thousands of scientists work in National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS)—public research institutes, universities, extension services, and innovation organizations dedicated to solving the challenges that matter most: food security, nutrition, climate resilience, biodiversity, sustainable agriculture, and rural livelihoods.

These researchers are developing the crops that withstand drought.
They are identifying biological alternatives to harmful pesticides.
They are conserving forgotten and underutilized foods.
They are helping farmers adapt to climate change.
They are generating the evidence that informs better agricultural policies.

Yet much of this work remains invisible.

The Global NARS Consortium exists to change that.

It brings together national agricultural research systems from every region, creating a global community that shares knowledge, strengthens capacity, promotes South–South collaboration, and ensures that scientific solutions developed in one country can benefit many others.

The university was never built as a money-making machine.

It was built to preserve knowledge, test ideas, challenge assumptions, and prepare society for the future.

Likewise, public agricultural research was never created to maximise profits.

It exists because hunger, climate change, degraded soils, emerging pests and diseases, malnutrition, and biodiversity loss cannot be solved by markets alone.

No genuine researcher begins a PhD because it is the fastest path to wealth.

Everyone knows easier roads.

Business.
Finance.
Politics.
Entertainment.

Instead, researchers choose laboratories, libraries, experimental farms, field stations, hospitals, archives, and remote rural communities.

They accept failed experiments.
Rejected papers.
Uncertain funding.
Long seasons of patient work.
Years before discoveries become solutions.

Why?

Because some responsibilities are greater than a salary.

Gregor Mendel quietly planted peas. The world later called it genetics.

Marie Curie persevered through hardship. Her discoveries transformed science and medicine.

Norman Borlaug developed improved wheat varieties that helped prevent famine and saved millions of lives.

Jonas Salk refused to patent the polio vaccine. When asked who owned it, he replied:

"The people."

That is research at its best.

Agricultural research has transformed humanity in similar ways.

Countless scientists working in national research institutes have developed improved crop varieties, sustainable farming practices, better livestock systems, and innovations that feed billions of people—often without their names ever becoming widely known.

The Global NARS Consortium exists to ensure these researchers are no longer working in isolation.

It connects institutions, accelerates collaboration, and amplifies the collective impact of public agricultural research worldwide.

Knowledge, however, also carries responsibility.

Science can heal or harm.
It can restore ecosystems or destroy them.
It can strengthen communities or deepen inequality.

The question has never been whether researchers deserve to earn well.

They do.

They deserve competitive salaries, well-equipped laboratories, reliable funding, modern infrastructure, international collaboration, and public respect.

But society must remember that knowledge is a public good before it becomes an economic asset.

Governments must remember this too.

Investing in National Agricultural Research Systems is not charity.

It is an investment in national resilience.

When research is neglected, countries eventually pay through imported technologies, declining agricultural productivity, food insecurity, climate vulnerability, weak evidence for policymaking, brain drain, and lost opportunities for innovation.

The Global NARS Consortium, under the leadership of GFAiR, represents a shared commitment to prevent that future.

Because no single country can solve tomorrow's agricultural challenges alone.

But together, through stronger National Agricultural Research Systems connected by the Global NARS Consortium, the world's researchers can generate the knowledge, innovation, and partnerships needed to build sustainable, resilient, and equitable agrifood systems for generations to come.


(Adapted from: What Many Don’t Know: No Genuine Researcher Entered the University to Become Rich - Wadzani Dauda, PhD, D.D.)

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Radiation entomology and the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT)

14 July. Irradiation Applications in Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) Programs for the Mediterranean Fruit Fly (Ceratitis capitata).

This webinar was organized in collaboration with AARINENA and the General Directorate of Agricultural Research and Policies (TAGEM), Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry of Türkiye. It brought together leading experts in radiation entomology and the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) to discuss the application of irradiation in Mediterranean fruit fly management programmes.

The webinar covered the principles of SIT and its integration into pest management strategies, the use of gamma and X-ray irradiation to sterilize Mediterranean fruit flies, irradiation dose optimization, insect quality assurance, mass rearing, and operational aspects of SIT implementation. Speakers also shared experiences from national and regional SIT programmes, highlighted recent advances in radiation entomology, and discussed opportunities for strengthening regional collaboration in sustainable fruit fly control.
  • Moderated by Dr. Didem KÖKDEN, International Relations Coordinator at TAGEM.
  • Dr. Ümran Akkan Demirer, Head of the Biotechnical Control Department, Bornova Plant Protection Research Institute (TAGEM), who will present the operational implementation of SIT, including mass rearing, sterilization, quality control, and field application.
  • Dr. Dilan Özmen, Senior Researcher at the TENMAK Nuclear Energy Research Institute, who will present irradiation technologies for sterile insect production, dose optimization, and quality assurance.

Note: 

Türkiye's Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) programme progressed more slowly than anticipated because it remained in the research, development and pilot implementation phase for many years. The programme focused on developing domestic capacity—including mass rearing of Mediterranean fruit flies, genetic sexing strains, irradiation protocols, quality control, and release technology—before moving to operational field releases. In recent years, with continued technical support from the IAEA, Türkiye has accelerated implementation: in 2025 the Bornova Plant Protection Research Institute installed and calibrated a new ground-based sterile insect release system and began pilot releases in citrus orchards in İzmir, confirming that the national programme is actively expanding rather than being discontinued.

Jordan’s Mediterranean fruit fly SIT programme was interrupted mainly because it depended on sterile flies shipped from Guatemala, making it vulnerable to long transport times, flight cancellations, and stricter aviation security after September 2001, which sometimes caused shipments to arrive late or in poor condition. Regional political and security tensions also complicated coordination among Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian Authority, while the absence of a nearby mass-rearing facility limited reliable expansion. The programme itself was technically successful in suppressing fruit fly populations, but these logistical and geopolitical constraints led to interruptions and encouraged a shift from eradication toward sustained suppression.

Note:

This CIRAD workshop aims to bring together key players to accelerate the operationalisation of SIT within an integrated health vision. It will bring together scientists, French public health stakeholders (Regional Health Agencies, Santé Publique France, Ministry of Health, Mosquito Control Services) and foreign stakeholders, international SIT experts and private vector control operators.

Note: 

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), through the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture, supports several Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) programmes in Africa. 

These programmes use gamma- or X-ray irradiation to sterilize male insects before releasing them into the environment, reducing pest populations without pesticides. SIT is currently being applied primarily against tsetse flies, fruit flies, and, increasingly, disease-transmitting mosquitoes.


Success stories

  • The Joint FAO/IAEA Centre is testing induced genetic variation for insect pest resistance as an alternative to other techniques. Seven African countries are participating in this project, with a focus on the cowpea pod borer. Early success has already been demonstrated by one participating research group in India.
  • The IAEA, in cooperation with the FAO, has helped Morocco achieve its first victory in the ongoing campaign to suppress the Mediterranean fruit fly. Moroccan counterparts have received the training and equipment necessary to detect and respond in a timely manner to any incursion by other fruit fly pests, which is a prerequisite for sustained suppression using the SIT. 
  • The IAEA, in cooperation with the FAO, helped Senegal to suppress pest populations by applying the SIT. The disease that tsetse flies transmit can kill livestock or make them sick. The tsetse fly populations in the entire project area are suppressed by more than 97%, resulting in a very low prevalence of the disease trypanosomosis that the flies transmit. This resulted in a significant increase in milk yields, and a ten-fold increase in the use of imported, more productive, exotic cattle with a positive overall return on investment. 
  • A new fruit fly mass rearing facility in Mauritius went into service in August 2019, with the capacity to produce 15 million flies per week. The target is to release the sterile flies in fruit and vegetable production areas to suppress fruit and vegetable infestations in selected areas. 
  • The IAEA, in partnership with the FAO, has provided technical support to a false codling moth project in South Africa. The insects are produced locally in a mass rearing facility and released in the citrus production areas. The release period is from September to June over a period of ten months, with 40 million moths per week released throughout 16 500 hectares.


African Regional Cooperative Agreement for Research, Development and Training related to Nuclear Science and Technology (AFRA) network


AFRA is an intergovernmental agreement of 39 African Member States established in 1990. Supported by the IAEA, it strengthens peaceful nuclear applications in agriculture, human health, water resources, and industry.AFRA works directly with specialized regional networks and centers to build local expertise:
  • AFRA-NEST: The African Network for Education in Nuclear Science and Technology (AFRA-NEST) harmonizes curricula, awards scholarships, and facilitates the exchange of students and researchers across the continent.
  • RDCs: AFRA utilizes over 30 designated Regional Designated Centres (RDCs), such as the Graduate School of Nuclear and Allied Sciences (SNAS) in Ghana and the University of Alexandria in Egypt, to conduct master's fellowship programs.Thematic Focus: Cooperative projects span six main areas, including sustainable energy, radiation safety, and nuclear security.


Kenyan Seed Savers Network in India

6 July 2026. A delegation from Seed Savers Network Kenya, led by Daniel Wanjama, visited Andhra Pradesh, India, to study community-managed natural farming. According to reports, the team toured farms in Eluru district observing climate-resilient farming practices, indigenous seed conservation, and natural farming systems with the Andhra Pradesh Community Managed Natural Farming (APCNF) program.

The delegation included John Kariuki Mwangi, Head of Slow Food Kenya; farmers Oddah Friday Ochomo and Zipporah Nyambura Kuria; Prasiddha Sapkota, an intern from New York University-Abu Dhabi; and Reddi Gowtham from RySS-APCNF. District Project Manager B Venkatesh briefed them on initiatives across the district.

At Gunampalli village in Dwaraka Tirumala mandal, the team observed Pre-Monsoon Dry Sowing (PMDS) using Navadhanyalu at the farm of Venkata Subba Reddy. They also visited U Ramachandra Rao’s seven-acre integrated Natural Farming model at Agokavaram village in Unguturu mandal and a 14-acre paddy compact block at Venkatapuram village, where desi paddy is cultivated without chemical inputs. The farmers also explained the natural farming methods.

During the exchange, the Kenyan delegation had the opportunity to showcase the work on the Global Field Concept demonstrating how a household can sustainably produce diverse and nutritious food on just 2,000 m² of land without relying on external agricultural inputs.


This approach highlights the potential of smallholder farmers to achieve food security while conserving biodiversity and building resilient farming systems.

The exchange has provided a rich platform for sharing knowledge, practical experiences, and innovative natural farming practices. The Kenyan Seed Savers Network team returned home with valuable lessons and inspiration that they will share with fellow farmers across Kenya, strengthening farmer-to-farmer learning and promoting sustainable, nature-based agriculture.


Related:

17th – 20th November 2026. 1st Eastern Africa Indigenous Seed Conference (EA-ISC 2026) - Building farmer managed seed system community of practice (COP) For a Resilient EASTERN AFRICA Region.

Last year Seed Savers Network, Kenya   and AFSA collaborated on a very important initiate. A capacity building for youth representatives from over 25 countries in Africa. Here's, a touch of what happened. We also look forward to connecting further during the upcoming 1st Eastern Africa Indigenous Seed Conference to discuss the important role of the youth in promoting seed and food sovereignty. 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

FONTAGRO Knowledge Week


8 - 10 July 2026
. FONTAGRO Knowledge Week

The event combines the XXI Annual Technical Monitoring Workshop of FONTAGRO Projects with scientific presentations showcasing research and innovation across Latin America and the Caribbean. 

It is supported by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), IICA, the Government of New Zealand, the Global Research Alliance, Global Methane Hub, INTA Costa Rica, and other partners.

The opening session set the stage for three days of scientific exchange and regional collaboration by bringing together researchers, policymakers, development partners, and innovation leaders from across Latin America and the Caribbean. It highlighted FONTAGRO's vision of transforming agri-food systems through science, technology, and international partnerships, emphasizing the importance of collaborative research in addressing climate change, food security, and sustainable rural development.

08/07 Flagship Program 1 – Transformation of resilient and carbon-neutral crop systems

This session addressed the growing pressures of climate change, resource scarcity, and increasing food demand on agricultural production. Presenters showcased innovative approaches to improving crop resilience while reducing agriculture's environmental footprint, covering advances in soil management, biological inputs, nutrient-use efficiency, crop protection, sustainable irrigation, and climate-resilient cropping systems.
  • Pablo Mamani (PROINPA, Bolivia) – Nanotechnology in agricultural soil moisture management
  • Juliana Gómez Valderrama (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Leveraging biological products to build climate resilience
  • Francisco Salazar (INIA, Chile) – Nitrogen optimization for climate-smart food production
  • Víctor Hugo Sánchez (INIAP, Ecuador) – Managing potato purple top disease
  • Hugo Montero (INTA, Costa Rica) – Biologicals for sustainable agriculture
  • Ignacio Hisse (University of Florida, USA) – Integrating sorghum into Latin American production systems
  • Carolina Lizana (Universidad Austral, Chile) – Sustainable irrigation and fertilization in quinoa

08/07 Flagship Program 2 – Livestock and animal protein systems

This session examined how livestock systems could become more productive while reducing their environmental impact. Presentations focused on climate-smart livestock production, methane mitigation, sustainable grazing systems, resilient farm management, animal welfare, and tropical dairy production, demonstrating practical pathways toward more sustainable animal production systems.
  • Carlos Gómez (Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina, Peru) – Sustainable livestock in the Amazon
  • Yury Granja Salcedo (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Methane reduction in ruminants
  • Marcelo Cesar Contreras (INTA, Argentina) – Resilient farm networks
  • Natalia Aguilar (INTA, Argentina) – One Welfare approaches
  • Nelson Vivas (Universidad del Cauca, Colombia) – Tropical dairy systems
  • Alejandro Radrizzani (INTA, Argentina) – Gran Chaco cattle and methane reduction

09/07 Flagship Program 3 – Impact 2030

This session demonstrated how scientific innovation was translated into practical benefits for farmers and rural communities. Speakers presented successful examples of scaling agricultural innovations through extension services, public-private partnerships, participatory research, and regional collaboration, highlighting approaches that accelerated the adoption of climate-smart technologies across Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • Carlos Hernández (Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica) – Geographical indications for Mesoamerican cacao
  • Romina Romaniuk (INTA, Argentina) – Integrated production systems for climate adaptation
  • Sebastián Villagra (INTA, Argentina) – Climate-smart research with Indigenous communities
  • Gina Garzón (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Climate-resilient potatoes for the Andes

09/07 Flagship Program 4 – Digital revolution in agriculture

This session explored how digital technologies were transforming agricultural management and decision-making. Presentations highlighted the use of satellite observations, precision agriculture, artificial intelligence, digital decision-support platforms, and AgTech innovations to improve productivity while enhancing environmental sustainability.
  • Martín Durante (INTA, Argentina) – Satellite monitoring of pasture biomass
  • Liliana Ríos (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Tropical Agriculture 4.0 and water management
  • Fernando Lattanzi (INIA, Uruguay) – Scaling AgTech innovation
  • Álvaro Roel (INIA, Uruguay) – Satellite monitoring and verification of methane emissions
  • Patricio Sandaña (Universidad Austral, Chile) – Online crop management platforms

10/07 Flagship Program 5 – The Future Food Basket

This session focused on agricultural diversification and innovations that contributed to resilient and nutritious food systems. Speakers presented research on biodiversity, sustainable horticulture, biological technologies, post-harvest protection, value-added products, and crop improvement, demonstrating how these innovations strengthened food security and agricultural competitiveness.
  • Javier Pitti (IDIAP, Panama) – Vertical farming technologies
  • Federico Battistoni (IIBCE, Uruguay) – Biologicals platform for Latin American farms
  • Gabriela Nicoleta Tenea (Universidad Técnica del Norte, Ecuador) – Postharvest bio-protectors
  • Ivonne Ximena Ceron Salazar (Universidad de Tolima, Colombia) – Value-added mango products
  • Fabián Jiménez (INTA, Costa Rica) – Regional genetic improvement network

10/07 Project Presentations

The finalist project presentations showcased some of the most promising research initiatives supported by FONTAGRO. The projects addressed topics including gene editing, climate-smart livestock systems, biofortified crops, disease management, soil carbon sequestration, and greenhouse gas mitigation, illustrating their potential to generate meaningful benefits for farmers, consumers, and the environment.
  • Sergio Feingold (INTA, Argentina) – Gene editing for plants and animals
  • Nelson Pérez (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Multipurpose silvopastoral systems
  • Maika Barría (IDIAP, Panama) – Iron-rich bean alliances
  • Mónica Betancourt (AGROSAVIA, Colombia) – Fusarium wilt prevention
  • Verónica Ciganda (INIA, Uruguay) – Soil carbon sequestration
  • Nicolás Ayub (INTA, Argentina) – Reducing nitrous oxide emissions from agriculture

Leveraging Digital Solutions for Strengthening the Seed Systems in Africa


9 July 2026
. Leveraging Digital Solutions for Strengthening the Seed Systems in Africa

As African countries seek to strengthen food security, resilience and sustainable agrifood systems, the digitalization of seed systems is emerging as a critical enabler of transformation. Digital tools can improve seed traceability, certification, regulatory services, information management and market access, while helping address challenges such as counterfeit seeds, fragmented processes and weak sector coordination.

The event was organized by the FAO Regional Office for Africa, FAO Country Offices in DR Congo, Somalia and South Sudan, with the support from the African Development Bank (AfDB) and in collaboration with AGRA and other partners. The webinar will bring together policymakers, seed authorities, researchers, development partners, private sector actors and digital agriculture specialists to explore how digital technologies are strengthening seed systems across Africa.

Participants learned from country experiences and innovative initiatives, including FAO's EmergenSys project, digital seed certification and traceability systems in Kenya, and electronic phytosanitary certification (e-Phyto) systems. Discussions will focus on practical lessons, sustainability, interoperability, governance and opportunities for scaling digital seed solutions.

The webinar was organized as part of the EmergenSys project activities, FAO RAF’s periodic digital agriculture knowledge-sharing events, and as a contribution to the preparations for the Digitalization Thematic Area of the Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) 2026.

Moderation - Priya Gujadhur, FAO Representative in Ghana (a.i.); Senior Regional Resilience Officer, FAO, Regional Office for Africa
  • Opening Remarks, Meshack Malo, Deputy Regional Representative, FAO Regional Office for Africa
  • Remarks by the African Development Bank (AfDB), Jeffrey Kwesiga, Senior Agribusiness Officer, AHAI.4 (RDGE) Africa Development Bank
  • Digital Seed Systems Initiatives under the EmergenSys Project in Somalia, South Sudan & DRCongo, Kiprotich Chemweno, Head of Information & Systems Management & Digital Innovation FAO Somalia
  • Digital Seed Certification and Traceability Systems in Kenya, Ephraim Wachira, Deputy Director, Seed Certification Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS), Kenya 

    @Ephraim: how can digitalisation protect IP rights on indigenous seeds?
    ANSWER: This can at least document the indigenous variety establishing the fact that it is a variety of common knowledge so that no one can later on claim it. More work can then be done to facilitate community ownership of the indigenous seed.
@Ephraim: How does KEPHIS support Kenyan Seed Savers with digitalisation?
We are currently working on legislation for community seed production and certification, we shall definitely come up with a digital format for it.
  • The Ethio-Seed digital platform, Ato Tefera Zeray, Technical Advisor Seed Systems, Ministry of Agriculture, Ethiopia
  • e-Phyto implementation in Uganda, Remco Kibago, Information Technologist, Ministry of Agriculture Animal Industry and Fisheries, Uganda
  • Presentation of the AU Biotech and Seed Partnership Platform, Catherine Langat, Seed system specialist FAOSFE
  • Poll / Questions and Answers / Interactive Discussion Ken Lohento, Digital Agriculture Specialist, FAO Regional Office for Africa

Related: 1st Eastern Africa Indigenous Seed Conference EA-ISC 2026

Building farmer managed seed system community of practice (COP) For a Resilient EASTERN AFRICA Region.

📅
17th – 20th November 2026
📍
Catholic university of Eastern Africa, Nairobi, Kenya

How Farmers Organizations are reclaiming Indigenous knowledge and research

8 July 2026. Roots of resilience: How Farmers Organizations are reclaiming Indigenous knowledge and research to tackle breadfruit and banana value chains challenges in the Pacific and Philippine

Hosted by AgriCord, this webinar showcased how farmers are utilizing indigenous knowledge and participatory research to combat climate change, crop diseases, and food insecurity.

Indigenous and local knowledge systems have long played a vital role in sustainable land management, biodiversity conservation, and climate adaptation. Yet these practices often remain under-recognized in agricultural development and research agendas.

At the same time, farmer organizations are increasingly demonstrating their capacity to generate solutions that are locally adapted, environmentally sustainable, and socially inclusive.

By bringing together farmer organizations, researchers, development practitioners, cooperatives, and policy actors, this webinar explored how farmer-led research and indigenous knowledge can contribute to building more resilient agroecological food systems.
  • Katja Vuori, CEO of AgriCord – Welcome Remarks
  • Mohinesh Reddy, Pacific Farmer Organisations (PFO) – Revitalizing Breadfruit Systems through Farmer-Led Agroecological Innovation and Indigenous Knowledge
  • Kahlil Apuzen-Ito, FARMCOOP – Tackling TR4 Disease in the Banana Value Chain through Participatory Agroecological Research and Innovation: Experience from the Philippines


Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

8 - 10 July 2026. Thirteenth Session of the Intergovernmental Technical Working Group on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

The primary focus of the meeting is the Revision of the Second Global Plan of Action for Plant Genetic Resources.

This Working Group meeting operates under the Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (CGRFA) and serves several core functions:
  • Reviewing Draft Guidelines: Deliberating on the Draft Revised Second Global Plan of Action for Plant Genetic Resources.
  • Evaluating Global Reports: Using findings from the Third Report on the State of the World's Plant Genetic Resources to identify key policy priorities.
  • Cross-Sectoral Discussions: Addressing how plant genetic resources contribute to climate change mitigation, adaptation, and broader biodiversity for food and agriculture initiatives.

Contributions:

Empowering Youth and Women in Agrifood: Bridging Entrepreneurship and Job Creation

7 July 2026. Empowering Youth and Women in Agrifood: Bridging Entrepreneurship and Job Creation for Sustainable Impact - Organizers: PAFO and COLEAD

The 27th PAFO–COLEAD Innovations Session discussed how agrifood systems and the organisations, cooperatives, MSMEs and support ecosystems can better serve youth and women as both entrepreneurs and jobseekers, and how strengthening one pathway can reinforce the other for sustainable, inclusive impact.
  • Moderator: Aimable Twagirayezu, Programs Officer, PAFO
  • Laura Wauters , Head of Training Department, COLEAD
  • Babafemi Oyewole, CEO, PAFO
  • Olusola Adeyemo , Lead Sustainable Farming , Distribution and Extension , AGRA

Panel 1: youth - and women -led agrifood businesses creating value and quality work 

Practical experiences across the entrepreneurship and employment pathways
  • Chiamaka Ndukwu, CEO , AgroHive
  • Akejo Gordon Victor, CEO , Gordon Agricultural Organisation
  • Fatoumatta Joof , Director of Programs, The Woman Boss

Panel 2: Building support ecosystems for inclusive growth

strengthening skills, entrepreneurship and quality employment
  • Genna Tesdall, Director of Young Professionals for Agricultural Development
  • (YPARD)
  • Mathabo Tsepa, Women Leader, SACAU, PAFO
  • Key takeaways and conclusion Ahoefa Soklou, Project officer, Networks and
  • Alliances, COLEAD

Program Links

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

East-West Seed transformed indigenous vegetable production across West Africa.

NAIROBI, Kenya, Jun 30. The Norman Borlaug Award for Field Research and Application, endowed by The Rockefeller Foundation, was presented to plant breeder Pamela Afokpe of East-West Seed for pioneering research that has transformed indigenous vegetable production across West Africa.

Afokpe was recognised for combining scientific plant breeding with farmer training and market development, including the creation of the Sika Gboma variety of a traditional West African leafy vegetable that has been adopted by thousands of smallholder farmers in Benin neighbouring ring countries.

Afokpe recognized the untapped potential of crops with proven nutritional value, deep cultural significance and established consumer demand. She not only built a research station from scratch to address this need, she pioneered a commercial market across West and Central Africa, leading to the sale of thousands of tons of vegetables that the global seed industry had largely neglected.

Her research also precipitated East-West Seed becoming a Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils (VACS) Champion. This global partnership recognizes “opportunity crops,” including traditional African vegetables, as critical to climate resilience and nutrition, a policy shift that Afokpe’s field work has helped validate. She led the effort for East-West Seed to join the African Vegetable Breeding Consortium headed by the World Vegetable Center, and she was selected as a 2024 One Planet Fellow by African Women in Agricultural Research and Development (AWARD) in recognition of her research leadership in helping Africa’s smallholder farmers adapt to a changing climate.

Afokpe and her mentor, the late Simon Groot (2019 World Food Prize Laureate), shared the vision that high quality seeds, combined with knowledge of good agricultural practices and connection to markets, are the most effective tools for smallholders to improve their livelihoods. Afokpe extended this conviction to vegetables that Groot’s mission had not yet reached, leveraging groundbreaking research and development for oft-overlooked opportunity crops to give growers a resilient, high-yielding future.

Honoring the women whose hands shaped America's food system




Who fed America?

For more than 250 years, Black women have grown, harvested, cooked, researched, taught, organized, and nourished a nation often without recognition. "We Belong at the Table" is a cinematic musical tribute honoring the women whose hands shaped America's food system and whose legacy continues to inspire future generations.

Created by WANDA (Women Advancing Nutrition, Dietetics and Agriculture) during its 10th anniversary and in recognition of America's 250th anniversary, this song celebrates the food sheroes who transformed recipes into resistance, gardens into freedom, and meals into movements.

From Harriet Tubman and Georgia Gilmore to Edna Lewis, Jessica B. Harris, Flemmie Kittrell, Leah Chase, Karen Washington, Toni Tipton Martin, Psyche Williams-Forson, Carla Hall, Lena Richard, Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor, Evelyn Crayton, Fannie Lou Hamer, and **Tambra Raye Stevenson, this film reminds us that food is more than nourishment; it is heritage, leadership, community, and democracy.

At WANDA, we believe:

🌱 Food is a human right.
🤝 Belonging is the foundation of democracy.
🍽️ Every table has the power to build healthier communities.

This is more than a song. It is an invitation to remember those who came before us—and to become the next generation of Food Citizens. Because we belong. And so does our food.

Join the Movement
❤️ Support the WANDA Scholars Fund and help prepare the next generation of food leaders.
🌍 Learn more about WANDA: https://www.iamwanda.org​

Follow WANDA:
Instagram: @_iamwandaorg
LinkedIn / Facebook / X: @iamwandaorg
Website: https://www.iamwanda.org​

Lyrics Written in Honor of America's Food Sheroes

Honoring the enduring contributions of Black women who have nourished families, strengthened communities, advanced science, preserved culture, and shaped democracy through food.

Monday, July 6, 2026

The Financing Agri-Food Systems Sustainably (FINAS) 2026 Dialogue

30 June–2 July 2026 at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre. The Financing Agri-Food Systems Sustainably (FINAS) 2026 Dialogue was held from under the theme "Towards Sustainable Financial Architecture for Africa's Food Systems." 

The summit brought together governments, development banks, financial institutions, agribusinesses, farmer organizations, investors, research organizations, and development partners to explore how Africa can mobilize and better align finance for food systems transformation.

Dr. Charity Mutegi, Director: "Agriculture continues to power Africa’s economies, yet financing models
remain stuck in the past. Despite donor funding and countless initiatives, the numbers have not shifted. This question is at the heart of #FINASSummit dialogue. That stagnation tells us one thing: we must do something differently."

By aligning policy, innovating finance models, and forging partnerships, we can unlock inclusive, de‑risked solutions for Africa’s food systems.

Programme

Overall, FINAS 2026 featured more than 50 plenary sessions, side events, deal rooms and masterclasses, with speakers drawn from African governments, the private financial sector, development finance institutions, farmer organizations, international organizations, research institutions and development partners. The programme emphasized practical financing solutions for policy alignment, inclusive finance, climate resilience, agrifood SMEs and investment mobilization across Africa.

The programme was organized around four major thematic pillars.

1. Policy Alignment and Coordination

This track focused on creating coherent financing frameworks that support implementation of the Kampala CAADP Declaration and national agricultural investment plans.

Main sessions included:

  • Continental Roundtable: Policy Alignment and Coordination for Financing the Kampala
    CAADP Declaration
  • Using National Agrifood Systems Investment Plans (NASIPs) to mobilize, coordinate and monitor investments
  • Launch of the Kenya National Agrifood Systems Investment Plan (NASIP) 2026–2030

Key discussion themes

  • Harmonizing national and continental investment strategies
  • Public finance reforms
  • Improving accountability for agricultural expenditure
  • Better coordination among governments, donors and private investors.

2. Innovative and Inclusive Finance Models

One of the largest streams examined how to unlock finance for farmers, cooperatives and agrifood SMEs. Panels and side events covered:

  • Making Agricultural Development Funds work
  • Public Development Banks and agricultural finance
  • Wholesale lending for agricultural financial inclusion
  • Agri-SME finance and prudential reforms
  • Finance linked with agricultural skills development
  • Blended finance mechanisms
  • Cooperatives and rural financial services

The discussions emphasized reducing investment risks while expanding affordable credit to smallholders, women, youth and agricultural enterprises.

3. Green, Climate and Resilient Finance

A major focus of FINAS 2026 was integrating climate resilience into agricultural finance. Major sessions included:

  • Embedding Climate Risk Intelligence into Agricultural Value Chain Financing (plenary keynote)
  • Carbon finance under Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement
  • Embedding insurance into agricultural lending
  • Climate-resilient finance for crop and livestock systems
  • Sustainable financing for resilient agrifood systems
  • Financing feed and fodder systems
  • Cold-chain financing and reducing food loss and waste

These sessions explored insurance, climate data, carbon markets, blended finance and innovative risk-sharing mechanisms that can attract private capital into climate-smart agriculture.

4. Trade, Investment and Partnerships

The final thematic stream examined how finance can strengthen regional markets and agricultural competitiveness. Topics included:

  • Trade and investment frameworks
  • Regional value chains
  • Public-private partnerships
  • Cross-border investments
  • Deal rooms connecting investors with agribusinesses
  • Business-to-business matchmaking
  • Scaling agricultural innovations

Special emphasis was placed on mobilizing domestic capital, strengthening African financial markets and reducing dependence on external aid.

Side events: extracts

02/07 Unlocking Sustainable Financing for Nutrition-Sensitive Food Systems: Evidence, Partnerships and Sub-national Level Innovations — Stock Take of Financial Flows for Food Systems (3FS)

The panel emphasized that transformation requires deliberate alignment of policy frameworks,
financing instruments, and institutional will.
  • Faraya Constance Zimudzi @FAO (#F𝗔𝗢, 𝗨𝗡): Nutrition-sensitive investment must be embedded into agrifood systems at country level.   
  • Ruth Okowa (#𝗚𝗔𝗜𝗡): Policies must translate into practice, ensuring SMEs can scale nutrition-focused solutions.   
  • Anna Tavina Eivin (#𝗙𝗔𝗢, 𝗨𝗡): Stronger institutional coherence is essential to sustain impact.     
  • Peter Chepata (𝗠𝗔𝗜𝗜𝗖): Financing instruments must be tailored to SME realities.    
  • Joseph Nderitu (𝗞-𝗨𝗡𝗜𝗧𝗬): Local financial institutions play a critical role in bridging access gaps.     
  • Blessings Mutheu (𝗜𝗻𝗰𝗼𝗳𝗶𝗻): Investors must see SMEs as viable partners in nutrition transformation.    
  • Samuel Ndonga (𝗙𝗔𝗢, 𝗨𝗡): Coordinated approaches are key to embedding nutrition into agrifood finance.   

2/07 Beyond Donor Funding: Advancing AI-Enabled Finance for Africa’s Smallholder Farmers

At FINAS 2026, SAFIC convened a high-impact side event themed “Beyond Donor Funding: Sustainable Business Models and AI-Enabled Finance for Africa’s Smallholder Farmers,” bringing together leaders from government, academia, development, technology, and the private sector to explore practical pathways for transforming African agriculture.

Prof. Simon Ndiritu, The Center Director of SAFIC, opened by challenging participants to rethink the agricultural ecosystem, noting that Kenya does not lack technology or innovation. Rather, the real opportunity lies in integrating advisory services, finance, quality inputs, insurance, and market access into a coordinated system that delivers tangible value for farmers.

In his keynote remarks, Amb. Philip Thigo, Special Envoy on Technology, emphasized the importance of building trusted mechanisms for data exchange across the agricultural ecosystem. He encouraged stakeholders to begin with practical, scalable proof points, highlighting food systems as a compelling use case for shared data infrastructure and collaborative innovation.

Moderating the discussion, Richard Migwalla of Baobab Impact framed the conversation around three critical questions:

  • Can we meet farmers at their point of need?
  • Can we deliver these solutions sustainably?
  • Can artificial intelligence improve the commercial equation for smallholder agriculture?

𝗔𝗴𝗿𝗶𝗰𝘂𝗹𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗹 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗧𝗲𝗰𝗵𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗮𝗹 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗚𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗽 (𝗧𝗪𝗧)

At #FINAS2026, leaders from across finance, policy, and development have launched the 𝗔𝗴𝗿𝗶𝗰𝘂𝗹𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗹 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗧𝗲𝗰𝗵𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗮𝗹 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗚𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗽 (𝗧𝗪𝗧,) a permanent mechanism designed to move evidence into policy, and policy into action.
Key highlights from the speeches:
David Sajabi, 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 & 𝗜𝗻𝘃𝗲𝘀𝘁𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝗘𝘅𝗽𝗲𝗿𝘁: “Good ideas must not remain reports. Reforms must be followed through.” He emphasized that success will be measured not by discussions, but by real change in agricultural lending.
Dr. Samuel Tiriongo, 𝗞𝗲𝗻𝘆𝗮 𝗕𝗮𝗻𝗸𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗔𝘀𝘀𝗼𝗰𝗶𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 Stressed the importance of evidence-based advocacy, better data, and exploring alternative collateral beyond land to unlock lending opportunities for farmers.
Titian Donda, 𝗠𝗮𝗻𝗮𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗗𝗶𝗿𝗲𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿, 𝗣𝗼𝗹𝗶𝗰𝘆, 𝗔𝗰𝗲𝗹𝗶 𝗔𝗳𝗿𝗶𝗰𝗮 Reflected on the journey of collaboration, noting that fragmented approaches have slowed progress. The TWT is a product of partnership and coordination, designed to transform data into evidence and evidence into reforms.
Petra Jacoby, 𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗺 𝗗𝗶𝗿𝗲𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿, 𝗔𝗴𝗿𝗶𝗰𝘂𝗹𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗲 𝗗𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹𝗼𝗽𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁, 𝗚𝗜𝗭 𝗞𝗲𝗻𝘆𝗮 Called the launch a reaffirmation of collective commitment. She highlighted the need for sound policies, reliable data, effective risk-sharing mechanisms, and strong coordination to build confidence among financial institutions and expand access to finance for farmers.

FINAS 2026 post-summit field visits 

From cold storage to food processing, the FINAS 2026 post-summit field visits continued with a stop at ItalNovis Group SEZ Limited in Tatu City, Kenya.

‎‎Delegates explored the company's modern pasta manufacturing facility, gaining firsthand insight into the journey from raw materials to finished products. The visit demonstrated how technology, efficient production systems, and value addition are driving competitiveness in Africa's food manufacturing sector.

‎‎With roots dating back to the 1950s, ItalNovis Group reflects the impact of sustained industrial investment and innovation in building resilient agrifood value chains.


Saturday, July 4, 2026

Rethinking Mushroom Production in Ghana Through the Cold Chlorine Method

- By  Gideon Adotey, Accra Technical University. His primary areas of research include biochemistry, enzymology, and related chemical and biological sciences (17/06/2026 Mushrooms for Africa International, WhatApp group, 237 members)

Ghana’s agricultural sector is being asked to do more with less. It must feed a growing population, create decent employment, reduce post-harvest waste, and adapt to a changing climate, all within a context of rising production costs and persistent energy challenges. Within this broader national agenda, mushroom cultivation presents a practical and underutilized opportunity.

Mushrooms offer an efficient way of converting agricultural residues into nutritious food and income. They require limited land, have relatively short production cycles, and can be integrated into both rural and peri-urban economies. Yet despite these advantages, the mushroom industry in Ghana remains small compared to its potential.

A major constraint lies in the preparation of growing substrates. Most producers rely on steam or pressure-based sterilization, or hot water pasteurization, to reduce contamination before inoculation. While effective, these methods are capital intensive. They depend on boilers, fuel, electricity, and skilled operation, all of which increase the cost of production and limit expansion, particularly for small and medium-scale farmers.

In response to these limitations, alternative approaches have emerged, among them the Cold Chlorine Method developed by Dr. John Holliday. This system introduces a chemical approach to substrate sanitation that avoids the need for heat-based treatment.

Rather than relying on temperature, agricultural materials such as straw, maize stalks, sawdust blends, and other crop residues are immersed in a chlorine solution at ambient conditions. The active chlorine compounds generate hypochlorous acid in water, which disrupts and destroys a wide range of microorganisms including bacteria, moulds, and fungal spores. The outcome is a substantially reduced microbial load that allows mushroom mycelium to establish dominance quickly.

For Ghana, the implications of this approach are significant.

One of the most immediate benefits is the reduction in energy demand. By eliminating the need for steaming or boiling, farmers can drastically cut fuel and electricity consumption. This is particularly important in an environment where energy costs are unstable and often high, especially for emerging agribusinesses.

Equally important is the accessibility of the system. The Cold Chlorine Method lowers the entry barrier into commercial mushroom production. Farmers and youth-led enterprises do not need to invest in expensive sterilization equipment before starting production. This opens up opportunities for wider participation, particularly among young people, women, and community-based organizations.

From an environmental perspective, the method also aligns with climate-smart agriculture principles. Reducing reliance on fuel-based sterilization contributes to lower greenhouse gas emissions and supports more sustainable production systems. At scale, such shifts in practice can contribute meaningfully to greener agricultural value chains.

Ghana also possesses a strong comparative advantage in raw materials. Large volumes of agricultural residues such as rice straw, maize stalks, cocoa pod husks, plantain leaves, sugarcane bagasse, and sawdust are generated annually, much of which is underutilized or burned. Mushroom production provides a pathway to convert these materials into valuable protein-rich food and economic activity.

The approach is particularly relevant for emerging climate-controlled mushroom farms, university-based production systems, and innovation-driven agricultural enterprises that are seeking cost-efficient methods of scaling production.

However, it is important to acknowledge that this method is not universally applicable. Highly enriched substrates used for specialty mushrooms such as lion’s mane, reishi, and shiitake often require stricter sterilization procedures due to their susceptibility to contamination. In such cases, conventional thermal sterilization may still be necessary.

A key technical consideration in the Cold Chlorine Method is the management of residual chlorine after treatment. While chlorine is effective in reducing contamination, any remaining chemical must be carefully addressed before inoculation. Excess chlorine can inhibit or damage mushroom mycelium.

For this reason, it is essential that residual chlorine levels are reduced to safe thresholds prior to spawning. This can occur naturally through aeration and time, but in more controlled production systems, chemical neutralization provides a more reliable solution. Sodium thiosulphate is widely recognized as an effective neutralizing agent, converting residual chlorine into harmless chloride compounds. This step is particularly important in commercial operations where consistency, spawn protection, and yield stability are essential.

Field reports and experimental observations suggest that properly treated substrates can support rapid colonization and reduced contamination rates. In some cases, production cycles may be shortened, allowing for faster turnover and improved overall productivity. These outcomes, while promising, still require systematic validation under Ghanaian conditions.

This is where the real opportunity lies. The question is not whether the Cold Chlorine Method should replace all existing systems, but whether it can be adapted, tested, and optimized within local production environments. Universities, research institutions, and commercial farms have a role to play in generating evidence on optimal chlorine concentrations, treatment durations, substrate suitability, and neutralization protocols using agents such as sodium thiosulphate.

Ultimately, the future of mushroom production in Ghana will depend on innovation that reduces cost while maintaining productivity and food safety. Technologies that simplify production without compromising yield deserve serious attention.

The Cold Chlorine Method is not a universal solution, but it represents a practical and thought-provoking approach to one of the most expensive stages of mushroom cultivation. In a country striving to expand agricultural entrepreneurship, improve food security, and create sustainable livelihoods, such innovations should not be overlooked.

A modern mushroom industry will be built not only on infrastructure, but also on the willingness to adopt, test, and refine simpler and more accessible technologies.


Announcement: The Applied Research Conference of Accra Technical University (ARCATU 2026) 

This is the premier annual research event at Accra Technical University, bringing together academics, researchers, industry experts, and students to discuss cutting-edge innovations and sustainable solutions for the future. This year, ARCATU 2026 will take place from September 16-18, 2026, at Accra Technical University, Ghana.

Side event: High Speed Culture Blender Technique to Advance Mushroom Production in Africa: ICMBMP 2026 Hands on Workshop at Accra Technical University

Mushroom Consulting LLC has introduced a new technical guideline on a high speed culture blender technique aimed at improving mushroom production efficiency, especially for growers in Africa. The method is designed to address common challenges in the region such as slow spawn production, contamination losses, and limited access to advanced laboratory facilities.

The technique is based on a simple idea. Instead of using multiple steps to multiply mushroom cultures on grain, a fully grown agar culture is directly turned into a liquid inoculum. This is done by blending the culture in a sterile solution under very clean conditions. The liquid produced contains small fragments of healthy mycelium that can be used immediately to inoculate grain or other growing materials. This removes several intermediate stages and saves a lot of production time.

The system uses basic equipment that is easy to find and use. A one liter or one quart glass jar serves as the blending container. The jar is filled with sterile water or a mild nutrient solution, fitted with a blender lid, and sterilized before use. After cooling in a clean environment, a selected agar culture is added and blended for a short time. The result is a smooth liquid inoculum that can be used right away for mushroom production.

This simple setup makes the method suitable for many African mushroom farms. Most growers already use tools such as pressure cookers, jars, and simple clean work areas. Because of this, the technique can be added to existing systems without major investment in expensive laboratory equipment. It offers a practical way to improve production speed and efficiency at both small and medium scale levels.

However, the guideline clearly stresses that cleanliness is very important. The blending process must be done in a sterile environment such as a laminar flow hood or a well prepared clean workspace. If contamination enters the system at this stage, it can spread quickly through the liquid inoculum and affect the whole production batch, leading to serious losses.

To help the culture recover quickly after blending, the method recommends adding a small amount of light malt extract, about twenty grams per liter, to the solution. This provides simple nutrients that help the mycelium recover and start growing faster. In places where malt extract is not available, other clean sugar sources may be used, but only if proper sterilization is followed.

One major advantage of this technique is the reduction in production time. By removing several traditional spawn expansion steps, growers can shorten the full cultivation cycle by several weeks. In good conditions, grain can be fully colonized within a few days after inoculation. Fast growing mushroom species may even reach fruiting much sooner than with conventional methods.

For African mushroom farmers, this can bring important benefits. It means more production cycles in a year, faster response to market demand, and improved income opportunities. It is especially useful for youth and women involved in small scale and community based mushroom farming.

Mushroom Consulting LLC has announced that practical hands on training on this technique will be offered at Accra Technical University as part of the ICMBMP 2026 pre conference workshop. The training will focus on sterile techniques, preparation of liquid inoculum, proper use of the culture blender system, and how to prevent contamination. The aim is to help African growers, technicians, and students learn how to safely apply the method in real production settings.

Even though the technique is simple in design, it requires careful handling and good discipline. Success depends mainly on maintaining strict cleanliness during every step. Without proper training, contamination can easily reduce its effectiveness.

Overall, the. By combining simple tools, faster biological processing, and practical training at Accra Technical University under ICMBMP 2026, it provides a clear pathway toward more efficient and modern mushroom farming across the continent.