Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia

The livestock sector in Ethiopia is characterized by low productivity due to inadequate supply of affordable high-quality animal feed year-round, with more acute gaps in the drought-prone regions of the country. This paper presents the economic benefits and insights into the role of cultivated forag...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dey, Bhramar, Notenbaert, An Maria Omer, Makkar, Harinder, Mwendia, Solomon W., Sahlu, Yonas, Peters, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: CAB International 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128552
_version_ 1855540383401902080
author Dey, Bhramar
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Makkar, Harinder
Mwendia, Solomon W.
Sahlu, Yonas
Peters, Michael
author_browse Dey, Bhramar
Makkar, Harinder
Mwendia, Solomon W.
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Peters, Michael
Sahlu, Yonas
author_facet Dey, Bhramar
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Makkar, Harinder
Mwendia, Solomon W.
Sahlu, Yonas
Peters, Michael
author_sort Dey, Bhramar
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The livestock sector in Ethiopia is characterized by low productivity due to inadequate supply of affordable high-quality animal feed year-round, with more acute gaps in the drought-prone regions of the country. This paper presents the economic benefits and insights into the role of cultivated forages, such as densification into pellets, in bridging gaps in feed supply. Nutrient requirement calculations for feedlot and dairy animals and meeting those requirements using cultivated forage-based diets are presented. However, forage crops need a viable forage seed supply system to assure access to quality assured seeds. This study thus explores the role of forage seed systems and presents intervention areas for Ethiopia.Results suggest diets containing greater than 85% cultivated forages can sustain daily body weight gain up to 1 kg in growing animals. The costs of nutrients from cultivated forages are up to 15-fold lower than those from conventional feed resources. The diets based on pelleted cultivated forages decrease costs of feeding animals during a 100-day drought period by 4-fold, fattening animals by 2.3-fold, and cost of feed for milk production by 4-fold. Utilization of cultivated forages could reduce methane emissions with abatement value between $165 and $240 USD per 1000 kg of body weight gain in the fattening sector. For the dairy sector, the abatement value would range from $1350 to $2400 USD per million liters of milk production. For the drought period of 120 days, the value of methane reductions would be between $5500 and $11,400 USD per 1000 animals.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace128552
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher CAB International
publisherStr CAB International
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1285522025-12-08T10:29:22Z Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia Dey, Bhramar Notenbaert, An Maria Omer Makkar, Harinder Mwendia, Solomon W. Sahlu, Yonas Peters, Michael forage seed systems economic development policies animal nutrition greenhouse gas emissions forrajes sistemas de semillas desarrollo económico The livestock sector in Ethiopia is characterized by low productivity due to inadequate supply of affordable high-quality animal feed year-round, with more acute gaps in the drought-prone regions of the country. This paper presents the economic benefits and insights into the role of cultivated forages, such as densification into pellets, in bridging gaps in feed supply. Nutrient requirement calculations for feedlot and dairy animals and meeting those requirements using cultivated forage-based diets are presented. However, forage crops need a viable forage seed supply system to assure access to quality assured seeds. This study thus explores the role of forage seed systems and presents intervention areas for Ethiopia.Results suggest diets containing greater than 85% cultivated forages can sustain daily body weight gain up to 1 kg in growing animals. The costs of nutrients from cultivated forages are up to 15-fold lower than those from conventional feed resources. The diets based on pelleted cultivated forages decrease costs of feeding animals during a 100-day drought period by 4-fold, fattening animals by 2.3-fold, and cost of feed for milk production by 4-fold. Utilization of cultivated forages could reduce methane emissions with abatement value between $165 and $240 USD per 1000 kg of body weight gain in the fattening sector. For the dairy sector, the abatement value would range from $1350 to $2400 USD per million liters of milk production. For the drought period of 120 days, the value of methane reductions would be between $5500 and $11,400 USD per 1000 animals. 2022-01 2023-02-08T16:01:12Z 2023-02-08T16:01:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128552 en Open Access application/pdf CAB International Dey, B.; Notenbaert, A.; Makkar, H.; Mwendia, S.; Sahlu, Y.; Peters, M. (2022) Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia. CABI Reviews 17(10) 40 p. ISSN: 1749-8848
spellingShingle forage
seed systems
economic development
policies
animal nutrition
greenhouse gas emissions
forrajes
sistemas de semillas
desarrollo económico
Dey, Bhramar
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Makkar, Harinder
Mwendia, Solomon W.
Sahlu, Yonas
Peters, Michael
Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title_full Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title_short Realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in Ethiopia
title_sort realizing economic and environmental gains from cultivated forages and feed reserves in ethiopia
topic forage
seed systems
economic development
policies
animal nutrition
greenhouse gas emissions
forrajes
sistemas de semillas
desarrollo económico
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/128552
work_keys_str_mv AT deybhramar realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia
AT notenbaertanmariaomer realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia
AT makkarharinder realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia
AT mwendiasolomonw realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia
AT sahluyonas realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia
AT petersmichael realizingeconomicandenvironmentalgainsfromcultivatedforagesandfeedreservesinethiopia