Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda

Africa’s vast arable land holds immense agricultural potential, yet productivity remains constrained by climate change, soil degradation, limited technology adoption, and entrenched socio-economic barriers, including the persistent marginalisation of women and youth. These challenges underscore the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rasche, F.
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179986
_version_ 1855532303895232512
author Rasche, F.
author_browse Rasche, F.
author_facet Rasche, F.
author_sort Rasche, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Africa’s vast arable land holds immense agricultural potential, yet productivity remains constrained by climate change, soil degradation, limited technology adoption, and entrenched socio-economic barriers, including the persistent marginalisation of women and youth. These challenges underscore the urgent need for transformative change, with soil health at the heart of efforts to build resilient, inclusive, and sustainable agricultural systems. Soil health is essential not only for agricultural productivity, economic viability, and ecosystem resilience, but also for advancing equity and sustainability across Africa’s diverse landscapes. This talk reflects on the key conditions, strategies, and policy levers required to achieve this transformation, aligning with the objectives of the African 10-year Action Plan for Fertiliser and Soil Health endorsed at the 2024 Africa Fertiliser and Soil Health Summit in Nairobi. It draws on CGIAR’s experience across Africa and Latin America to identify five interconnected levers essential for successful implementation: (1) inclusive, evidence-based policy mandates that address land tenure, access rights, and structural inequalities; (2) trusted multi-sectoral partnerships involving governments, the private sector, NGOs, donors, and farmers to drive reform and scale solutions; (3) demand-driven, trans-disciplinary R&D that delivers measurable outcomes and integrates user-centred, gender-sensitive approaches; (4) targeted investments and innovative financing mechanisms to expand private sector engagement and tailor solutions to local needs; and (5) inclusive capacity building that empowers women, youth, and marginalised groups. Finally, the talk emphasises that advancing agricultural transformation will require sustained commitment, with soil health positioned at the core of agricultural policy and practice as the foundation for a more equitable, climate-resilient, and productive future for Africa.
format Ponencia
id CGSpace179986
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1799862026-01-17T02:11:12Z Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda Rasche, F. africa gender-transformative approach soil fertilizers Africa’s vast arable land holds immense agricultural potential, yet productivity remains constrained by climate change, soil degradation, limited technology adoption, and entrenched socio-economic barriers, including the persistent marginalisation of women and youth. These challenges underscore the urgent need for transformative change, with soil health at the heart of efforts to build resilient, inclusive, and sustainable agricultural systems. Soil health is essential not only for agricultural productivity, economic viability, and ecosystem resilience, but also for advancing equity and sustainability across Africa’s diverse landscapes. This talk reflects on the key conditions, strategies, and policy levers required to achieve this transformation, aligning with the objectives of the African 10-year Action Plan for Fertiliser and Soil Health endorsed at the 2024 Africa Fertiliser and Soil Health Summit in Nairobi. It draws on CGIAR’s experience across Africa and Latin America to identify five interconnected levers essential for successful implementation: (1) inclusive, evidence-based policy mandates that address land tenure, access rights, and structural inequalities; (2) trusted multi-sectoral partnerships involving governments, the private sector, NGOs, donors, and farmers to drive reform and scale solutions; (3) demand-driven, trans-disciplinary R&D that delivers measurable outcomes and integrates user-centred, gender-sensitive approaches; (4) targeted investments and innovative financing mechanisms to expand private sector engagement and tailor solutions to local needs; and (5) inclusive capacity building that empowers women, youth, and marginalised groups. Finally, the talk emphasises that advancing agricultural transformation will require sustained commitment, with soil health positioned at the core of agricultural policy and practice as the foundation for a more equitable, climate-resilient, and productive future for Africa. 2025-09 2026-01-16T11:25:06Z 2026-01-16T11:25:06Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179986 en Open Access application/pdf Rasche, F. (2025). Driving change: inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda. Tropentag, September 10-12, 2025, hybrid conference, Nairobi, Kenya: IITA, (1 p.).
spellingShingle africa
gender-transformative approach
soil
fertilizers
Rasche, F.
Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title_full Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title_fullStr Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title_full_unstemmed Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title_short Driving change: Inclusive strategies to realise Africa’s fertiliser and soil health agenda
title_sort driving change inclusive strategies to realise africa s fertiliser and soil health agenda
topic africa
gender-transformative approach
soil
fertilizers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179986
work_keys_str_mv AT raschef drivingchangeinclusivestrategiestorealiseafricasfertiliserandsoilhealthagenda