Claire Provost in
Addis Ababa
25th April 2014
Ethiopia leads the
way in preserving crop seeds by engaging farming communities in the effort, and
making the exchange of seeds part of village life and culture, reports Claire
Provost. But now it's all at risk from a G8 plan to open Africa to corporate agriculture.
Inside the Ethiopian Institute of
Biodiversity's unassuming office complex in Addis Ababa, a series of vaults
houses tens of thousands of seed samples tightly sealed into small envelopes
and neatly catalogued in cold storage.
It's a treasure trove of genetic diversity
painstakingly assembled and set aside for future generations.
Founded in 1976, Ethiopia's national seed
bank is the oldest and largest of its kind in sub-Saharan Africa.
It's also part of a pioneering experiment to
link scientists with small-scale farmers to collectively revive and conserve
traditional, indigenous seeds in the face of drought and other threats.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
estimates that 75% of the genetic diversity of agricultural crops
worldwide was lost over the course of the 20th century.
Ethiopia - a living seedbank, in
farmers' fields
Melaku Worede, the former head of the seed
bank, says recurrent droughts have put the country's agricultural diversity at
risk, a problem compounded by farmers in some areas abandoning their local
varieties for new, high-yield, commercial seeds.
Hundreds of other respositories, including
the famed Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway and the UK's Millennium
Seed Bank, have cropped up around the world to store and save samples of major
crops and their wild relatives.
But funding shortages and political upheaval
have threatened collections in some countries. Other samples have been in
storage for decades, and may be dead, prompting fears that seed banks are
turning into seed museums or morgues.
In Ethiopia, scientists have taken a
different approach, opening their doors and collections to farmers and
spearheading new partnerships with rural communities.
Safeguarding seeds is about using, not
just storing them
Farmers' knowledge has been discounted by too
many for too long, says Melaku. "They
are underestimated out of prejudice ... but we have to give due credit, and
farmers also have to be rewarded for being custodians of our natural
wealth."
Melaku was head of the seed bank in the
1980s, when drought and acute food crises threatened the lives of hundreds of
thousands of Ethiopians.
"I thought, what are we doing? We have
one of the best facilities and yet cannot help. I thought then of doing more
than just storing seeds."
Melaku and his colleagues left the capital
for rural areas where they found farmers eating the seeds they would have
normally planted or saved. Alarmed, they gave out raw grain in exchange for the
farmers' seeds, to be returned after the drought.
Rooted in farming communities
Soon the scientists were launching rescue
missions and expeditions to collect and conserve seeds. They also experimented
with community banks that could house bigger volumes of seeds and keep them in
farmers' hands.
Just south of Addis Ababa, hundreds of dark,
tightly sealed jars are filled with legume, pulse and cereal seeds and stored
on tall wooden bookshelves at the Ejere community seed bank. After each
harvest, local farmers deposit samples, and in exchange get access to the
bank's stores.
Regassa Feyissa, who worked with Melaku for
several years, says community seed banks offer the chance to conserve genetic
diversity at the level of local farmers - where seeds are dynamically and
frequently exposed to changing environmental conditions rather than held in
suspension at sub-zero temperatures, while serving as a grain reserve in times
of crisis.
Having a field day
Outside the Ejere bank, Tadesse Reta is
planting wooden stakes in the ground, labeling sections of tilled land with the
names of crops planted. Tadesse, 47, a local farmer, says he is looking forward
to the bank's forthcoming "field
day", where up to 400 farmers are expected to inspect crops,
and debate the merits of the various seed varieties.
This is how participatory plant breeding
works, Regassa says. "There
is no recipe for developing varieties. It depends on who wants what."
It is also an interesting approach for
scientists, he adds. Unlike formal research, which looks for seed varieties
that can work across different climates and soil types, farmers are constantly
selecting for diversity, conserving a range of varieties and choosing them not
just for their yields but also for their taste or because they are particularly
resistant to disease or drought.
But all this is under threat from a
corporate seed grab
A new push to commercialise agriculture in
Africa could, however, put the future of the continent's diverse, indigenous
seeds at risk.
Regassa says the "indiscriminate push of technology and inputs"
by industrial farming schemes and their supporters has proved costly for
farmers and needs to be challenged. "Seed
security is more important than anything at this point, especially when the
government is under all of these external pressures."
In September 2013, the Common Market for East
and Southern Africa (Comesa) ministers approved regulations that would require
all seeds to be registered and deemed "uniform,
stable and genetically distinct" before being traded and sold.
Critics say this could, in effect,
criminalise farmers' traditional practices of saving and exchanging their
seeds, while allowing corporations and those who can afford the registration
process to capture the market.
The G8's plan to open Africa to
corporate agriculture
Private investment in seeds is one of the
stated indicators of success for the G8's landmark agriculture and poverty
plan in Ethiopia.
Under the New Alliance for Food Security and
Nutrition, Ethiopia is to change its seed law and policies to increase and
incentivise private investment in the development, multiplication and
distribution of seeds.
This could spell disaster for small farmers,
says Million Belay, co-ordinator of the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in
Africa. "It clearly
puts seed production and distribution in the hands of companies ... Yes,
agriculture needs investment, but that shouldn't be used as an excuse to bring
greater control over farmers' lives."
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