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KFA calls on government....

Thu, 3 Oct 2013 Source: Samuel Adadi Akapule

.... to provide farm

mechanization centre at Builsa North

By Samuel Adadi Akapule, Sandema

The Kobdema Farmers Association has called on government to as a matter of

urgency provide a farm mechanization centre at the Builsa North district to

support farmers in the area expand their farm sizes.

At a Press Conference held at Sandema the Builsa north district capital in

the Upper East Region on Tuesday , the Secretary of the Association, Mr Ademin

Atengkperik who read the statement on behalf of the farmers explained that it

had come to the realisation that the continuous dependence on the hoe and

cutlass as major tools for farming over the years was a major contributory

factor to the low agriculture production and the severing food insecurity among

farmers in the area.

Mr Atengkperik said “Even though government, private organisations and

individuals have for some decades made efforts to mechanise agriculture production

through the provision of tractors and other farm machinery, the desired impact

has not been felt among farming populations at Sandema and its environs”. He

indicated that as result, majority of people in the area who were

farmers were compelled to either use rudimentary implements such as the hoe and

cutlass or contract private tractors and bullock ploughs at exorbitant costs to

till their fields.

The association called on public institutions involved in agriculture

such as the Ministry of Food and Agriculture, the Builsa North District

Assembly and other laudable programmes such as SADA and the Northern Rural

Growth Programme to establish farm mechanization centre at Builsa North to

cater for the needs of farmers in the district and beyond.

The group further stressed the need for such facility to take into

consideration ploughing, planting, weeding, harvesting, processing and storage of

farm produce among others.

They tasked government to consider the supply of bullock and donkey

ploughs and other facilities that could easily be manufactured and assembled

locally to meet local environmental conditions as well as the needs of farmers.

“Further more attention should be given to the development of human

capacity in agricultural machinery management, operations and maintenance to

ensure sustainability of the facilities to be provided at the centre”, they

noted

According to the farmers a research conducted by the association in

June, 2013 with funding from the BUSAC Fund revealed that the area had vast

uncultivated arable land and indicated that with sustained investments in farm

mechanization, farmers would utilize the uncultivated arable lands to expand

production and increase food and income security.

In terms of tractor services,

the research revealed that the services were generally available in the area.

However, these services were not adequate to meet the demands of farmers in the

area and were also expensive.

It also revealed that the private sector played the dominant role so far

as tractor services provision in the area was concerned. The Presbyterian

Agriculture Station in Sandema was found to be very active in the provision of

tractor services to farmers over the years.

MOFA and the Builsa North District Assembly were found not to be

involved in the provision of tractor services in the district. However, the

Savannah Accelerated Development Authority at the time of the research had two

tractors in the area which were hired to farmers for ploughing purposes.

The research further showed that even though bullock and donkey

ploughing services were available in the district, the services were currently

not adequate to meet the demands of the predominantly farming population in the

area.

The research stressed that there was little or no involvement of

government in the provision of bullock and donkey ploughing services as the

services were primarily provided by private individuals and the minimum cost of

hiring bullock or donkey plough for preparing one acre of land was GH¢25.00

while the highest cost was GH¢50.00, which the farmers indicated was very

expensive for them to afford.

Mr Vincent Subbey, the Monitor of

BUSAC Fund entreated the farmers to also seek support in the capacity building

in the area of marketing their produce and said this could be in the form of

adding more value to their produce to enable them attract market.

Mr Ernest Beyuo Aayel , BUSAC

Service Fund , regretted that in the three northern regions there was no single

Food Buffer Company and indicated that after pursuing the National Food Buffer

Company they were advised that farmer Associations could form companies to be

licensed by the National Buffer Food Company to enable it purchase food items

for them.

He therefore advised the farmer

Associations in the northern regions to come together and take advantage to purchase

food items for the Buffer Food Company, stressing that this would help address

the problem of marketing of farm produce.

Source: Samuel Adadi Akapule