Alpha Diallo and GTZ review panel member,
Wolfgang Schipprack. |
A model project
Donors and farmers agree – Project gets
high marks for important work
The Africa Maize Stress project (AMS), in which CIMMYT
is a key partner, was termed “A flagship project” in
a recently completed review. A three-member panel from the German
Corporation for Technical Cooperation (GTZ) spent the week from
24 February–1 March with AMS staff and partners, to assess
the performance of the project’s work from 2003-20005 and
make recommendations for its future direction. Two of the six days
were spent on field visits to the
Kenya Agricultural Research Institute’s (KARI) Embu Center,
one of the project’s major maize breeding sites; Bar Sauri
Millennium Village, a beneficiary of AMS maize varieties; and Western
Seed Company, a local seed enterprise that is multiplying and marketing
the varieties.
Team leader, Dr. Manfed van Eckert, said the reviewers
saw in AMS, qualities that could serve as a model for similar multi-faceted
projects in Africa. Among these were the “excellent working
relations with national partners, and the Eastern
and Central African Maize and Wheat (ECAMAW) Research Network.”
The review congratulated CIMMYT maize breeder and
AMS project coordinator Alpha Diallo for his management of the complex,
multi-donor funded, partnership project. AMS is supported by Germany’s
Federal
Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), the
International
Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Swedish
International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), and the
Rockefeller Foundation, and works with national agricultural
research systems (NARS), NGOs and seed companies in 10 eastern and
central African countries.
Review team member Jeffrey Luhanga commented that
all too often breeders’ improved varieties “sit on the
shelf for lack of solid partnerships with the seed sector. But this
project’s successes are having a direct bearing on household
nutrition, and especially on weanling children, among the most vulnerable
people in Sub-Saharan Africa.” The dramatic quadrupling of
maize yields recorded in 2005 at the Sauri Millennium village illustrates
the point.
“The program has gone to the grassroots level;
it is benefiting the people of Africa. Congratulations!” said
van Eckert.
The Africa Maize Stress project is developing maize
varieties that are tolerant to drought, low soil fertility, Striga
weed, and endemic pests and diseases (maize streak virus, blight,
and grey leaf spot), and is working with local partners to ensure
that these varieties reach resource-poor farmers in its mandate
regions. The project’s current phase is stepping up the development
of imidazolinone-resistant (IR) maize varieties for Striga
weed control, and quality protein maize (QPM) suited for African
ecologies.
The GTZ team recommended that in its next phase, AMS
advance current activities, but also broaden its geographical horizons,
through strategic partnerships in “…war-torn areas in
Southern Sudan and Somalia,” and “investigate sustainable
financing options for maize breeding programs in the region.”
Other partners in the project include the
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and national
research programs like KARI in Kenya.
For more information contact Alpha Diallo
(a.diallo@cgiar.org)
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