Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia

Maize became increasingly important in the food security of Ethiopia following the major drought and famine that occurred in 1984. More than 9 million smallholder house- holds, more than for any other crop in the country, grow maize in Ethiopia at present. Ethiopia has doubled its maize produc- tivi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Abate, T., Shiferaw, B., Menkir, A., Wegary, D., Kebede, Y., Tesfaye, K., Kassie, M., Bogale, G., Tadesse, B., Keno, T.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/74461
_version_ 1855538041243828224
author Abate, T.
Shiferaw, B.
Menkir, A.
Wegary, D.
Kebede, Y.
Tesfaye, K.
Kassie, M.
Bogale, G.
Tadesse, B.
Keno, T.
author_browse Abate, T.
Bogale, G.
Kassie, M.
Kebede, Y.
Keno, T.
Menkir, A.
Shiferaw, B.
Tadesse, B.
Tesfaye, K.
Wegary, D.
author_facet Abate, T.
Shiferaw, B.
Menkir, A.
Wegary, D.
Kebede, Y.
Tesfaye, K.
Kassie, M.
Bogale, G.
Tadesse, B.
Keno, T.
author_sort Abate, T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Maize became increasingly important in the food security of Ethiopia following the major drought and famine that occurred in 1984. More than 9 million smallholder house- holds, more than for any other crop in the country, grow maize in Ethiopia at present. Ethiopia has doubled its maize produc- tivity and production in less than two decades. The yield, currently estimated at >3 metric tons/ha, is the second highest in Sub-Saharan Africa, after South Africa; yield gains for Ethiopia grew at an annual rate of 68 kg/ha between 1990 and 2013, only second to South Africa and greater than Mexico, China, or India. The maize area covered by improved varieties in Ethiopia grew from 14 % in 2004 to 40 % in 2013, and the application rate of mineral fertilizers from 16 to 34 kg/ ha during the same period. Ethiopia ’ s extension worker to farmer ratio is 1:476, compared to 1:1000 for Kenya, 1:1603 for Malawi and 1:2500 for Tanzania. Increased use of im- proved maize varieties and mineral fertilizers, coupled with increased extension services and the absence of devastating droughts are the key factors promoting the accelerated growth in maize productivity in Ethiopia. Ethiopia took a homegrown solutions approach to the research and development of its maize and other commodities. The lesson from Ethiopia ’ s experience with maize is that sustained investment in agricul- tural research and development and policy support by the national government are crucial for continued growth of agriculture
format Journal Article
id CGSpace74461
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace744612025-11-11T10:44:58Z Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia Abate, T. Shiferaw, B. Menkir, A. Wegary, D. Kebede, Y. Tesfaye, K. Kassie, M. Bogale, G. Tadesse, B. Keno, T. maize food security Maize became increasingly important in the food security of Ethiopia following the major drought and famine that occurred in 1984. More than 9 million smallholder house- holds, more than for any other crop in the country, grow maize in Ethiopia at present. Ethiopia has doubled its maize produc- tivity and production in less than two decades. The yield, currently estimated at >3 metric tons/ha, is the second highest in Sub-Saharan Africa, after South Africa; yield gains for Ethiopia grew at an annual rate of 68 kg/ha between 1990 and 2013, only second to South Africa and greater than Mexico, China, or India. The maize area covered by improved varieties in Ethiopia grew from 14 % in 2004 to 40 % in 2013, and the application rate of mineral fertilizers from 16 to 34 kg/ ha during the same period. Ethiopia ’ s extension worker to farmer ratio is 1:476, compared to 1:1000 for Kenya, 1:1603 for Malawi and 1:2500 for Tanzania. Increased use of im- proved maize varieties and mineral fertilizers, coupled with increased extension services and the absence of devastating droughts are the key factors promoting the accelerated growth in maize productivity in Ethiopia. Ethiopia took a homegrown solutions approach to the research and development of its maize and other commodities. The lesson from Ethiopia ’ s experience with maize is that sustained investment in agricul- tural research and development and policy support by the national government are crucial for continued growth of agriculture 2015-10 2016-05-25T11:59:50Z 2016-05-25T11:59:50Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/74461 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Abate, T., Shiferaw, B., Menkir, A., Wegary, D., Kebede, Y., Tesfaye, K., ... & Keno, T. (2015). Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia. Food Security, 7(5), 965-981.
spellingShingle maize
food security
Abate, T.
Shiferaw, B.
Menkir, A.
Wegary, D.
Kebede, Y.
Tesfaye, K.
Kassie, M.
Bogale, G.
Tadesse, B.
Keno, T.
Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title_full Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title_short Factors that transformed maize productivity in Ethiopia
title_sort factors that transformed maize productivity in ethiopia
topic maize
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/74461
work_keys_str_mv AT abatet factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT shiferawb factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT menkira factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT wegaryd factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT kebedey factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT tesfayek factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT kassiem factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT bogaleg factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT tadesseb factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia
AT kenot factorsthattransformedmaizeproductivityinethiopia