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Wow!. Cowpeas as they should look. Two months of weevil work. A little history first … Bean/Cowpea Collaborative Research Support Program (CRSP) The CRSP Technical Committee asked: Why produce more cowpea if you can’t store it?. Cameroon, November 1986 ….
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A little history first … Bean/Cowpea Collaborative Research Support Program (CRSP) The CRSP Technical Committee asked: Why produce more cowpea if you can’t store it?
Cameroon, November 1986 … Can we devise technologies that allow people to store their cowpea grain after harvest with minimal losses? Partnership between Purdue-Cameroon formed – one of the early participants was Ousmane Boukar; Laurie Kitch, Jane Wolfson, Dick Shade, MoffiT’Ama, Georges Ntoukam
BackgroundCRSP Project (1987-2002) Goals • Create simple, affordable, low-cost, implementable technologies to preserve cowpea grain after harvest on low-resource farms in Cameroon (later West/Central Africa) • Do so via Collaboration Host-Country = USA Institution • Define success this way: success ONLY if technologies are accepted and used by farmers.
Project Strategy & Tactics • Learn from the PEOPLE • Jane Wolfson and Laurie Kitch • Frequent visits • Collaboration the key • Work in villages with villagers • Create a smorgasbord of control tactics • Forget magic bullets • Simple, low-cost, available materials • No insecticides or chemicals
Storage in Ash Breeding for storage Solar disinfestation Genetic transformation Air-tight storage Cowpea Storage Technology Initiatives (1987)
Adoption survey report – 2006 • Economists interviewed randomly chosen farmers in seven West African countries • Plastic bagging technology had 23% adoption in Nigeria, 13% in Burkina Faso, etc. • Net present value of the technology was $186,000,000; original investment was ca. $3,000,000 • In sum: Big Benefits – what next?
Bill & Melinda Gates Purdue Improved Cowpea Storage (PICS) Project • 5 years duration • Improve bagging storage technology • Extend technology to 3.7 million cowpea farm families (47 million people) • Ten countries in West Africa • Budget $11.4 million
Lessons Learned … 1. Respect the people you are trying to help.
Lessons Learned … 2. Leave your arrogance at home
Lessons Learned … 3. Think simple, low-cost, practical and using available materials
Lessons Learned … 4. Try to understand how the people see the problem – see it through their eyes, not yours.
Lessons Learned … 5. Goal should be to see your technology USED …
Lessons Learned … 6. Plan for the loooooonnnnnng haul – 25 year time frame is a good one …
Lessons Learned… 7. Helping poor people is awfully hard
Lessons Learned … • 8. Technology alone is never enough … Lee House … Technologies don’t spread on their own. They need help. They ALWAYS need help.
Lessons Learned … • 9. Mobilize talented people. If you do, you are 90 percent successful already. • (Laurie Kitch, Jane Wolfson, Dick Shade, MoffiTa’Ama, Katy Ibrahim, BoukarOusman, Georges Ntoukam, Jess Lowenberg-DeBoer)
Lessons Learned … 10. Accept it as your fate that you are a fund raiser and an awareness raiser.
WHAT NEXT? Can PICS bags work for Other Crops? • Are PICS sacks effective against other pests on other crops? (Of course people were already trying them on other crops) • Will PICS sacks prove COST-effective for other crops? • Future question, given “yes” responses: Could users be persuaded to adopt them and the value chain developed?
As regards “Do PICS Sacks Work” • What is the state of the art currently – what crops/crop products have PICS bags been tried with so far? • What might be the problems? • Mold might be a problem aflatoxin? • Insects might develop anyway despite low oxygen • Insects might bore holes in the bags • Seeds might not germinate
Special Thanks to Lowell Hardin Russ Freed Pat Barnes-McConnell Katy Ibrahim Jess Lowenberg-DeBoer Dick Shade Laurie Kitch Moffi Ta-Ama George Ntoukam Venu Margam Dieudonne Baributsa Heather Fabries + MANY more!