How beans are beating hunger in Burundi

Burundi’s population has been expanding far faster than its economy. And while the agriculture sector contributes around 40% of GDP and to over 95% of food supplies, high pressure on land is leading to soil fertility depletion, eroding the country’s capacity to ramp up food production for a g...

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Main Author: Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance
Format: Otro
Language:Inglés
Published: Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109120
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author_browse Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance
author_facet Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance
author_sort Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Burundi’s population has been expanding far faster than its economy. And while the agriculture sector contributes around 40% of GDP and to over 95% of food supplies, high pressure on land is leading to soil fertility depletion, eroding the country’s capacity to ramp up food production for a growing population. The Flagship project: “Improving food security, nutrition, incomes, natural resource base and gender equity for better livelihoods of smallholder households in sub-Saharan Africa” between 2015 and 2020, sought to boost bean production and yields as a staple crop. Already an important food crop in the country, beans provide 50% of daily protein and 20% of calories. Improved bean varieties with high levels of iron and zinc also alleviate micronutrient deficiencies particularly in children and women. Beans also help farmers threatened by climate change to stagger food supply through harsher seasons, with edible leaves and pods allowing growers to sell or store dry beans. While bean volumes rank only after sweet potato and bananas in the country, lowyielding varieties were grown on around half of all land. Yields also declined during periods of political instability between 1993 and 2005. However, in recent years, yields have recovered in part due to efforts of the Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance and partners, releasing 23 climate resilient highyielding, nutrient rich and farmer preferred varieties between 2015 and 2019.
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spelling CGSpace1091202025-02-20T05:24:13Z How beans are beating hunger in Burundi Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance beans frijol farmers agricultores Burundi’s population has been expanding far faster than its economy. And while the agriculture sector contributes around 40% of GDP and to over 95% of food supplies, high pressure on land is leading to soil fertility depletion, eroding the country’s capacity to ramp up food production for a growing population. The Flagship project: “Improving food security, nutrition, incomes, natural resource base and gender equity for better livelihoods of smallholder households in sub-Saharan Africa” between 2015 and 2020, sought to boost bean production and yields as a staple crop. Already an important food crop in the country, beans provide 50% of daily protein and 20% of calories. Improved bean varieties with high levels of iron and zinc also alleviate micronutrient deficiencies particularly in children and women. Beans also help farmers threatened by climate change to stagger food supply through harsher seasons, with edible leaves and pods allowing growers to sell or store dry beans. While bean volumes rank only after sweet potato and bananas in the country, lowyielding varieties were grown on around half of all land. Yields also declined during periods of political instability between 1993 and 2005. However, in recent years, yields have recovered in part due to efforts of the Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance and partners, releasing 23 climate resilient highyielding, nutrient rich and farmer preferred varieties between 2015 and 2019. 2020-08 2020-08-30T17:46:48Z 2020-08-30T17:46:48Z Other https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109120 en Open Access application/pdf Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance PABRA. How beans are beating hunger in Burundi. Summary. Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance (PABRA); International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) 1 p.
spellingShingle beans
frijol
farmers
agricultores
Pan-Africa Bean Research Alliance
How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title_full How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title_fullStr How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title_full_unstemmed How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title_short How beans are beating hunger in Burundi
title_sort how beans are beating hunger in burundi
topic beans
frijol
farmers
agricultores
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/109120
work_keys_str_mv AT panafricabeanresearchalliance howbeansarebeatinghungerinburundi