Cover_Rebuilding West Africas Food Potential

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234 Rebuilding West Africa’s food potential


C) Establishing seed production within the Union

Seed production within the Union addresses the need to increase yields and reduce costs related to
the purchase of inputs. Seeds available for Union producers are sometimes insufficient and often
of poor quality. Union members will gain more autonomy and be able to produce better if they
develop the capacity to produce their own seeds. Members identified maize, rice, cowpea, sorghum
and soybeans as priority products for marketing, putting these at the forefront of their own seed
production. Participants also identified their own specific needs to implement this. Thus, to produce
quality seeds, the Union must equip itself with adequate production equipment (including fertilizer
and seed base), processing equipment as well as premises to stock seeds. Training in composting
would be most beneficial. Finally, important standards regarding the land are to be observed, as
it must be sufficiently far from other agricultural land by being separated by a minimum of five
contiguous hectares of land. The Union must therefore find this land before starting any activity.

Some of the resources needed to achieve such an objective may be mobilized internally. Indeed, the
Union can use part of its estate for the land and the compost pits. The Union also already has the
human capacity and knowledge required to perform the necessary reforestation. However, external
resources must be mobilized for technical support such as mentoring by the Ministry of Agriculture’s
staff (for advice, monitoring, training) or seed certification, which is done by the same Ministry. As
illustrated in the results of the stakeholder analysis, good relations with the Ministry of Agriculture
should facilitate obtaining these resources.

Once all the resources have been mobilized, Union members will need to implement activities:
firstly, the Union should identify potential seed producers within its members and provide training in
composting. Secondly, efforts should focus on which agricultural production should be chosen, that
is which products should be prioritized in terms of seeds, as well as necessary resources for each
(What soil? What inputs? Any storage premises?). Once all of this is done, it will be very important
to obtain the seed certification from the Ministry of Agriculture and finally to prepare the marketing
of these seeds, in particular by applying the Union logo that will allow seed producers to develop a
brand and stand out in the market. In most cases, these activities can be performed with the Union’s
internal resources, while external resources are within its range (training and certification).

In short, establishing seed production within the Union can be done autonomously even if it entails
some governance implications, such as the need to create a management committee for monitoring
seed production activities. It will be set up according to procedures already established by the Union
and will not only be responsible for monitoring operations but also for marketing any seed production
surplus. All the different seed crops should be represented on the management committee, with one
member responsible for each crop. The options available to achieve autonomous seed production
quality are well within the scope of the Union.

The action plan for this proposal is as follows:
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