Africa In Brief
Africa In Brief
The 缅北禁地Human Settlements Pro-gramme and the African Development Bank (ADB) have announced a joint programme to generate investments of nearly $600 mn over five years to supply clean water to Africa鈥檚 fast-growing cities and towns. The agreement, signed 23 March, will provide $217 mn in grants to improve the quality and supply of water for drinking, industry and sanitation in urban areas, which may well account for more than half of Africa鈥檚 population by 2030. The grants are expected to be followed by an additional $362 mn in loans from the ADB for drinking water and sanitation projects to help Africa make progress towards the Millennium Development Goal of halving the percentage of people without access to clean water by 2015.
The Fourth World Water Forum, held in Mexico City in March, estimated that $20 bn annually is needed to achieve Africa鈥檚 development targets for water by 2015. To date, Africa has developed less than 4 per cent of its available water for drinking and sanitation, irrigation and power generation. High poverty rates and infrastructure costs have hampered the continent鈥檚 ability to harness its water resources. Only about 6 per cent of farmland is irrigated, while just 4 per cent of Africa鈥檚 electricity supply comes from hydro power. Despite a range of African programmes to develop the continent鈥檚 water assets, including the African Water Facility and the infrastructure plan of the New Partnership for Africa鈥檚 Development (NEPAD), progress has been slow.
African farmland in 鈥渃risis鈥
A forthcoming report on African soil quality finds that more than 75 per cent of farmland in sub-Saharan Africa is severely depleted. Such depletion produces yields less than a third of the Asian and Latin American averages and contributes to a 鈥渟oils health crisis鈥 and rural poverty. The study by the International Fertilizer Development Centre, to be released at a major conference in June (see Agenda, page 22), argues that if present trends continue, the food shortfall will require African imports of staple foods to nearly double by 2020 to $14 bn.
More than 100,000 hectares of African forests and savannah are lost each year as farmers plough new land to replace exhausted fields. High costs and transportation difficulties mean that African farmers on average apply only a fifth of the amount of fertilizer needed to replenish vital nutrients in the soil.
Speaking at the Rockefeller Foundation in New York on 30 March, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo declared that 鈥淎frica needs giant steps鈥 towards improved crop harvests. He was joined by African Union Commission Chairman Alpha Oumar Konar茅, NEPAD Chief Executive Firmino Mucavele and African Development Bank President Donald Kaberuka to support the study and reflect growing concern in Africa about the deepening crisis in agriculture.
Africa needs funds to fight bird flu
In March, 缅北禁地agencies and 45 African governments vowed to expand health facilities and surveillance services to improve efforts to combat 鈥渂ird flu.鈥 At the meeting in Libreville, Gabon, the biggest bird flu conference in Africa to date, African delegates agreed that their countries should carry out internationally approved measures to fight the virus and establish a committee to monitor implementation that would include representatives of the African Union and 缅北禁地agencies. The challenge now, says the 缅北禁地coordinator for avian influenza, Mr. David Nabarro, is to raise the resources so desperately needed to carry out those efforts.
The virus can be controlled if infected animals are culled and farmers compensated for their losses, Mr. Nabarro told Africa Renewal. However, African governments say they 鈥渄on鈥檛 have the resources in their own countries to mount effective control operations, to compensate people who lose their chickens and other poultry, to communicate essential messages to the people and to prepare health services for human cases鈥 in the event of a pandemic, said the senior 缅北禁地system coordinator for avian and human influenza.
In January, donors pledged $1.9 bn to help developing countries boost surveillance and strengthen health and veterinary services to control the disease. However, this money is primarily directed to Asia, where bird flu was concentrated at the time of the pledging conference. 鈥淲hat we are doing now is warning the world that African countries also need resources, quickly, and in a way that they can access easily,鈥 explained Mr. Nabarro. Delays of even a few weeks can be catastrophic, he said.
So far, four African countries 鈥 Cameroon, Egypt, Niger and Nigeria 鈥 have confirmed cases of H5N1 bird flu and the continent鈥檚 first human death has been reported in Egypt. The Libreville conference noted that Africa needs at least three more veterinary laboratories and three more human health laboratories capable of determining the H- and N- sub-types of bird flu, crucial in evaluating risk and tracking the spread of the dangerous H5N1 strain. Currently, most samples have to be sent abroad for testing.
World Bank officials warn that the economic impact on Africa could be grave, judging by the experience in Asia. By mid-2005, more than 140 mn birds had died or were destroyed to contain the disease in Asia, accounting for $10 bn in losses. In Nigeria alone, there are more than 100 mn birds, many of them owned by poor rural dwellers whose livelihoods depend on raising poultry.