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In the highly risky environment of the Sahel, livestock play
a vital role in the support of livelihoods, through income
generation, as a form of insurance against erratic rainfall
and often as the only available store of wealth. Transhumance
and nomadism are peculiarities of the region, as they represent
the most efficient adaptation to the harsh climatic and physical
conditions.
To enhance development in the region, the Union
Economique et Monétaire Ouest-Africaine (UEMOA) was founded in 1994, comprising eight West African member
countries, namely Benin, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea
Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo. UEMOA envisages cooperation
and economic growth through the harmonisation of sectoral
policies, abolishing trade restrictions and facilitating the
free circulation of goods and services.
Although animals and animal products from the region are
not able to access the global market due to the prevailing
animal disease situation, enhancing the efficiency of domestic
and intra-regional livestock trade has been identified as
a promising option to improve the incomes of livestock keepers
in the arid and semi-arid parts of the region. The Sahelian
countries are low cost producers of ruminant livestock while
those on the coast, owing to the increasing demand from rapidly
growing urban centres, are major importers of livestock and
livestock products.
At present, cross-border livestock trade is limited by high
transportation and handling costs, high direct, indirect and
illicit taxes, and poor market information. Lack of capital
and poor access to credit also hamper commercial actors in
the sub-sector. Movement restrictions, imposed to prevent
the spread of contagious livestock diseases, and diverse zoo-sanitary
legislation further act to constrain intra-regional trade.
The Pro-Poor Livestock Policy Initiative (PPLPI) has engaged
with UEMOA to facilitate intra-regional trade through harmonization
of the zoo-sanitary legislation, in compliance with the World
Trade Organisation’s (WTO) Sanitary and Phytosanitary
(SPS) Agreement, and to enhancement the implementation capacity
of the national animal health services in the UEMOA countries.
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