Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses

This publication reports on the experience of CIMMYT promoting hermetically sealed metal silos to minimize losses in stored maize and other grains under smallholder farming conditions in Mexico. The metal silo was developed through the "Postcosecha" project first implemented in the 1980s in Central...

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Autores principales: Odjo, Sylvanus, González Regalado, Jessica, Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo, Loon, Jelle J. van, Verhulst, Nele
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135038
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author Odjo, Sylvanus
González Regalado, Jessica
Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo
Loon, Jelle J. van
Verhulst, Nele
author_browse González Regalado, Jessica
Loon, Jelle J. van
Odjo, Sylvanus
Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo
Verhulst, Nele
author_facet Odjo, Sylvanus
González Regalado, Jessica
Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo
Loon, Jelle J. van
Verhulst, Nele
author_sort Odjo, Sylvanus
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This publication reports on the experience of CIMMYT promoting hermetically sealed metal silos to minimize losses in stored maize and other grains under smallholder farming conditions in Mexico. The metal silo was developed through the "Postcosecha" project first implemented in the 1980s in Central America and introduced in Mexico in the 1990s. The hermetic metal silo promoted in Mexico has evolved into a more advanced version with a conical upper shape and the use of bronze or aluminum plugs to increase airtightness and eliminate the need to use poisonous aluminum phosphide tablets. Through CIMMYT and Mexican partnerships, the manufacturing process for the silos has been established in a Mexican Norm to standardize the dimensions. CIMMYT and its network of collaborators have been promoting the hermetic metal silo through the hub model. Farmers typically store maize grain in woven polypropylene bags with or without chemical insecticides; grain damage can reach 32%, in tropical conditions after three months of storage. In side-by-side comparisons of the hermetic metal silo and farmers' practices, the hermetic metal silo kept losses to less than 3%. Local artisans were trained in manufacturing the silos and to facilitate access of smallholder farmers to the technology, but the lack of awareness, business models, and credits have hindered the widespread adoption of hermetic metal silos. Promotion of the hermetic metal silo, including stakeholder collaboration leading to institutional anchoring, should continue, to reduce storage losses and to safeguard farm households' food security, health, and profits.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace135038
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
publisherStr International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
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spelling CGSpace1350382025-11-06T13:13:25Z Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses Odjo, Sylvanus González Regalado, Jessica Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo Loon, Jelle J. van Verhulst, Nele postharvest control storage losses silos grain pests This publication reports on the experience of CIMMYT promoting hermetically sealed metal silos to minimize losses in stored maize and other grains under smallholder farming conditions in Mexico. The metal silo was developed through the "Postcosecha" project first implemented in the 1980s in Central America and introduced in Mexico in the 1990s. The hermetic metal silo promoted in Mexico has evolved into a more advanced version with a conical upper shape and the use of bronze or aluminum plugs to increase airtightness and eliminate the need to use poisonous aluminum phosphide tablets. Through CIMMYT and Mexican partnerships, the manufacturing process for the silos has been established in a Mexican Norm to standardize the dimensions. CIMMYT and its network of collaborators have been promoting the hermetic metal silo through the hub model. Farmers typically store maize grain in woven polypropylene bags with or without chemical insecticides; grain damage can reach 32%, in tropical conditions after three months of storage. In side-by-side comparisons of the hermetic metal silo and farmers' practices, the hermetic metal silo kept losses to less than 3%. Local artisans were trained in manufacturing the silos and to facilitate access of smallholder farmers to the technology, but the lack of awareness, business models, and credits have hindered the widespread adoption of hermetic metal silos. Promotion of the hermetic metal silo, including stakeholder collaboration leading to institutional anchoring, should continue, to reduce storage losses and to safeguard farm households' food security, health, and profits. 2023 2023-12-05T14:54:48Z 2023-12-05T14:54:48Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135038 en Open Access application/pdf International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center Odjo, S., González Regalado, J., Ruíz Albarrán, V. H., Van Loon, J., & Verhulst, N. (2023). Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses. CIMMYT, Mexico. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22778
spellingShingle postharvest control
storage losses
silos
grain
pests
Odjo, Sylvanus
González Regalado, Jessica
Ruíz Albarrán, Victor Hugo
Loon, Jelle J. van
Verhulst, Nele
Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title_full Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title_fullStr Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title_full_unstemmed Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title_short Promotion in Mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
title_sort promotion in mexico of the hermetic metal silo to minimize stored grain losses
topic postharvest control
storage losses
silos
grain
pests
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135038
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