Sala Stampa
 

Greener cities crucial to African food security

30-08-2012

FAO releases first status report on urban gardening in Africa

Questo articolo non è disponibile in italiano.

Cliccare qui per chiudere il messaggio.
Photo: ©FAO/Ami Vitale
Greener cities improve food security, employment and the environment.
 

30 August 2012, Rome - Africa's urban population is growing faster than that of any other region, but many of its cities are not keeping pace with the increasing demand for food that comes with that growth. A new FAO publication says policymakers need to act now to ensure that African cities will be "green" enough to meet their nutrition and income needs in a sustainable way.

The publication, Growing greener cities in Africa, is the first status report on African urban and peri-urban horticulture - the home, school, community and market gardens that produce fruits and vegetables in and around the continent's cities.

The report draws on surveys and case studies from 31 countries across the African continent, and makes recommendations on how cities can better prepare to face the rapidly increasing demand for food and other basic amenities.

Many African countries have recorded strong, sustained economic growth over the past decade, leading to more urbanization and raising hopes of a new era of shared prosperity. But increasingly, urban areas also draw people in search of a way out of rural poverty, only to find little, if any improvement in their lives.


More than half of all urban Africans live in slums, up to 200 million survive on less than $2 a day, and poor urban children are as likely to be chronically malnourished as poor rural children.


"The challenge of achieving a "zero hunger" world - in which everyone is adequately nourished and all food systems are resilient - is as urgent in African cities as it is in rural areas," reads the foreword by Modibo Traoré, FAO Assistant Director-General for Agriculture and Consumer Protection.


"African policymakers need to act now to steer urbanization from its current, unsustainable path towards healthy, ‘greener' cities that ensure food and nutrition security, decent work and income, and a clean environment for all their citizens," the foreword continues.

The book was released in advance of the sixth session of the World Urban Forum in Naples, Italy (1-7 September). The Forum was established by the United Nations to examine one of the most pressing problems facing the world today: rapid urbanization and its impact on communities, cities, economies, climate change and policies. 

By the end of the current decade, 24 of the world's 30 fastest growing cities will be African. The publication cites surveys showing that between 2010 and 2030, the urban population of sub-Saharan Africa is projected to double, from about 300 to 600 million.

Sustainable market gardens


Growing greener cities in Africa voices particular concern about the future of market gardening - the irrigated, commercial production of fruit and vegetables in designated or other urban areas.


Market gardening is the single most important source of locally grown, fresh produce in 10 out of 27 countries surveyed, and the number-two source in six other countries. But market gardening has grown with little official recognition, regulation or support. In some cities, it is becoming unsustainable: to maximize returns, market gardeners have increased the use of pesticides and polluted water.


The publication urges national governments and city administrations to work together with growers, processors, suppliers, vendors and others to give market gardens and urban and peri-urban agriculture the political, logistical and educational support necessary for sustainable development.


Among the specific recommendations, policymakers are advised to zone and protect land and water for market gardens, and encourage growers to adopt FAO's "Save and Grow" farming model. Save and Grow seeks to boost yields while conserving and enhancing natural resources. It includes applying the right amount of appropriate, external inputs at the right time - such as pesticides, fertilizers and seeds.


FAO and urban gardening


FAO's Programme for Urban and Peri-urban Horticulture helps cities to ensure a year-round supply of affordable, fresh produce that meets the nutrition needs of their populations. It does that, first, by promoting market gardening, usually within 30 kilometres of city centres.


FAO also supports action to help low-income urban households to "grow their own", as a way of improving the quality of their diet, saving cash to spend on other needs, and earning income from the sale of surpluses.

 

Green zones
In some countries, market gardens have long been a recognized component of urban planning. In the 1980s, the Government of Mozambique created “green zones” for market gardens around Maputo and other major cities. Despite exponential urban growth since then, Maputo’s gardens are still largely intact, protected by the city council.
Photo: ©FAO/Olivier Asselin
An FAO officer checks an urban gardening project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Contact

Charmaine Wilkerson
Media Relations (Rome)
(+39) 06 570 56302
charmaine.wilkerson@fao.org

Urban women and gardening
Women do much of the market gardening in several African countries. In Nairobi, most commercial vegetable growers are female slum dwellers. Women make up 90 percent of market gardeners in Bissau and 70 percent of those in Brazzaville and Bujumbura. In Nigeria, horticulture is mainly a male occupation, but women are joining them in increasing numbers near Lagos. Also, female intermediaries often provide growers with production loans and have first rights to harvests.
Photo: ©FAO/Ami Vitale
To be sustainable, urban gardening needs political, logistical and educational support.
Strumenti

Facebook