04 April 2011

New CTA strategy

The Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation ACP-EU (CTA) recently issued its new strategy for the period 2011-2015.

For the next 5 years, CTA will focus its efforts on three priority areas: supporting regional agricultural and natural resource management policies and strategies; promoting priority agricultural value chains; and strengthening the information, communication and knowledge management capacities of ACP institutions and networks.

Interview with CTA Director Michael Hailu

Download the plan document

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24 December 2010

Mobile applications focus of ICT Update

The December 2010 issue of ICT Update looks at various mobile applications in agriculture.

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14 June 2010

Mobile devices, telecenters and policy regulation

At the recent IAALD congress, Paul Barera from the Rwanda Telecentre Network described at the CTA workshop on m-agriculture how mobile devices can provide another communications and information channel for rural communities, one that can also support telecentre revenue models.




Koda Traore of CTA, interviewed at the IAALD Congress 2010, takes this further and describes how mobile devices extend the definition of telecentres beyond being simply a geographical point to an "IT service centre". In this concept, mobile phones are a value adding channel for teleservice operators and rural communities, taking information directly into homes. This is well demonstrated in the Grameen Foundation programme, whose positive evaluation was reported earlier in IAALD blog.




Surprisingly, perhaps, there is no mention of policy issues in the Grameen evaluation. Koda Traore's emphasis on the importance of policy regulation to ensure equity in the spread of m-services is echoed by Anju Manjal in talking about the very different geographical context of the Pacific region.




CTA is continuing its m-agriculture research programme and plans a second Observatory on the subject later this year, probably in Southern Africa. For more details contact K.Painting at CTA.

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09 June 2010

The mobile decade for agriculture?

Wall Street has called the end of an era and the beginning of the next one: The most important technology product no longer sits on your desk but rather fits in your hand." This excited introduction comes from a recent article in the New York Times celebrating the point last month when Apple computers overtook Microsoft as the No 1 technology company by value. From the rural development point of view, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, this has been evident for some time which is why CTA is focusing on researching and sharing experiences on how mobile digital devices can support rural communities.

Antonella Pastore of the CGIAR ICT/KM programme recently blogged a report about the CTA workshop during IAALD Congress 2010. The report includes examples of the stories that participants exchanged on how these devices are impacting communities and summarises the outcomes of the Knowledge Cafe discussions.

CTA also interviewed a number of people at the Congress to get their views about the potential and challenges posed by mobile devices.

Annriette Esterhuysen had engaged the workshop with a story of how mobile phones have enriched a long-standing rural radio project.



Interviewed at the IAALD Congress 2010, Anriette Esterhuysen, Executive Director of APC (Association of Progressive Communications) reflects on the characteristics of mobile devices, their impact and the need to maintain a balanced view of their potential.


Michael Riggs, of FAO, reminded us that mobiles are in no way a new technology.




Interviewed at the IAALD Congress 2010, Michael Riggs of FAO gives some background to the work of FAO, CTA, IICD and others in developing a new conceptual framework for ICT4D. He also gives a measured view of what he sees as the role and importance of mobile devices.

Story by Pete Cranston

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21 April 2010

M-agriculture session at IAALD Congress

Next week in Montpellier, CTA's Kevin Painting will organise a session entitled: 'm-agriculture: how mobile devices transform information and communication.'
  • How do you use mobile phones in your work with agricultural communities?
  • What are the most significant new developments in services and technologies in this, the fastest changing sector of ICTs?
  • How are we engaging with the continually increasing numbers of people in agricultural economies who, for the first time, are connected and reachable?
  • How can we exploit the opportunities and meet the challenges presented by the convergence of technology, media and information services?
Billions of people use mobile phones to communicate and the number of unconnected people is plummeting. This connectivity, the mobile phone economy and the convergence of different media and technologies onto mobile digital devices have transformed the ICT landscape and are transforming the entertainment and information service economies.

m-agriculture refers to refers to agricultural services, technology dissemination, and communication using mobile devices such as mobile phones, laptops, netbooks, PDAs and other wireless enabled devices. Many, including the International Development sector, were surprised by the rapid emergence of connected populations across the globe using mobile devices. Although there are many innovative applications and services being tested and implemented, it is clear that we are only beginning to recognise the tremendous opportunities being presented and the need to reap the benefits of the technology for all.

This is an area which has excited much interest and featured in sessions at previous IAALD events, such as the IAALD/AFITA/WCCA Congress in Tokyo, Japan (2008) and the Second IAALD Africa Chapter Conference in Accra, Ghana (2009). More recently, CTA held its 2009 Observatory on ICTs on mobile services where participants explored issues relating to the development of sustainable mobile-services, how best to engage the commercial sector and how to embed good practice in slow moving government and other agencies. The research paper and report are contained in the Observatory wiki http://observatory2009.cta.int/.

This participatory workshop aims to connect people working in this area with those who wish to learn more and those who wish to increase their use of mobile services. We shall be looking at three areas:

1. What are the features of mobile phones, and their attendant economy, that might have the most transformative impact on agricultural information services?

2. What do we need to change in how we segment, format and deliver information to best exploit the potential of mobile devices?

3. How is the relationship between paid-for and public good changed by this most commercially driven of innovations?

More postings on mobile devices in agriculture

IAALD 2010 Congress

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09 March 2010

ICTs: Serving the needs of farmers

To build a stable business, farmers regularly need information on a wide range of subjects. They need long and short-term weather reports to choose the best time to plant and harvest. They need current information on the spread of pests and diseases that might threaten their crops. They need to get the latest tips and advice to make the most of their available land. And they need market data to find the right buyers at exactly the right time. But farmers don’t want all the information; they only want what’s relevant to their specific needs. And to help them, a few services are now providing agricultural information tailored to fit the particular working conditions of individual farmers.

Read more ...

Also:

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07 March 2010

TIC : Répondre aux besoins du paysan

Pour avoir un business stable, le paysan a besoin d’informations sur toutes sortes de sujets : des prévisions météo à court et à long terme afin de choisir le meilleur moment pour les semis et la moisson ; des rapports sur la propagation des maladies et des nuisibles susceptibles de s’attaquer à leurs cultures ; les derniers conseils et astuces pour optimiser son exploitation ; des infos commerciales pour trouver les bons acheteurs au bon moment. Il ne veut pas être abreuvé d’infos, mais seulement connaître ce qui peut lui être utile. Pour répondre à cette demande, plusieurs fournisseurs d’information proposent des services « sur mesure ».

Lire plus ...

Aussi:

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03 November 2009

Mobile information services in agriculture and rural development

20 September 2009

Mobile Applications in Agriculture and Rural Development


The World Bank recently convened a workshop to discuss 'Mobile Innovations for Social and Economic Transformation'. One of the sessions looked into applications in agriculture and rural development.

Read a report from the session; download presentations by Kerry McNamara (PPTx format), David Edelstein (Grameen Foundation) and Aparajita Goyal (World Bank).

In November, the 2009 CTA Observatory meeting on ICTs for Development will discuss mobile devices in agriculture; a recent issue of ICT Update. is focused on mobiles.

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02 August 2009

A more affordable Essential Electronic Agricultural Library

Speaking at the recent IAALD Africa conference, TEEAL Project Director Jaron Porciello explains the new pricing policy for TEEAL.

The Essential Electronic Agricultural Library - TEEAL - is a full-text digital library of 149 agricultural journals made available at low cost to universities, agricultural research organizations and government ministries in eligible low-income countries.

She also outlines a CTA-supported initiative to make TEEAL available to institutions in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific.


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06 July 2009

Nouveau site Internet du CTA / New CTA website

Welcome to the new CTA website! / Bienvenue sur le nouveau site Internet du CTA !

It is not merely a facelift, but an all over body job. The improvements to the site include a new federated search engine, an improved Google map feature to showcase our partners and a new thematic feed from the site - http://www.cta.int/en/

Il ne s’agit pas d’une simple rénovation, mais d’une transformation de fond en comble. Un nouveau moteur de recherche fédérée, une nouvelle présentation des cartes Google afin de référencer nos partenaires et un nouveau contenu thématique sont autant d’améliorations apportées à ce site - http://www.cta.int/fr/

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28 June 2009

Le pérennité des télécentres ruraux

Koda Traoré du CTA explique les leçons tirées du projet TelecentresAfrica, mis en place par le CTA. Le problème de pérennité des télécentres ruraux est le résultat d'un manque de contenus pertinents et de diversification des services, et de l'insuffisance de « l'appropriation sociale » des services des télécentres par les communautés locales.


Il souligne également le besoin d'élaborer des stratégies d'élargissement et des plans de développement commercial.

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24 June 2009

Sustaining rural telecentres in Africa

CTA's Koda Traoré introduces lessons from the TelecentresAfrica project of CTA.

He explains that the unsustainability of rural telecentres emerges from their lack of appropriate content, lack of diversified services, and insufficient social 'appropriation' of the telecentre services by the local communities.


He also highlights the need for scaling up strategies and business models, moving beyond pilots and short-term donor funding.

He outlines CTA priorities to support these telecentres: First, capacity strengthening to manage telecentres. Second, to sensitize ICT policy planners regarding the important role of telecentres. Third, to support existing telecentres to become more sustainable.

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12 November 2008

Potencian servicios de información agrícola caribeños

“La situación y el panorama de los servicios de información agrícola en el Caribe: construyendo liderazgo y compromiso para emprender acciones conjuntas” es el nombre de la reunión que congregará a 20 especialistas en información del Caribe, el 13 y el 14 de noviembre, en Trinidad y Tobago.

La actividad, organizada por el Instituto Interamericano de Cooperación para la Agricultura (IICA) y el Centro Técnico para la Cooperación Agrícola y Rural (CTA, por sus siglas en inglés), tiene por objetivo lograr una mayor integración entre los servicios de información caribeños y los internacionales.

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28 October 2008

Communication and climate change

This week CTA is holding its annual seminar in Burkina Faso.

It will identify ways of improving access to climate change information in ACP countries ...

Check out the seminar blog for updates.

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28 August 2008

Only connect? Listening to farmers is key factor for success

The "Only connect?" session at the 2008 IAALD conference in Atsugi, Japan provided the opportunity to hear firsthand from those working with ICTs with farmers in rural areas in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific.

The ICT environment has changed significantly in the last year. Low cost laptops have developed following the OLPC (One Laptop per Child) project. Mobile phones are falling in price and offer laptop features. Hosting on the web is often free and an increasing number of web2.0 applications provide a wide range of free or low cost services. Wifi and affordable satellite connection are enabling better and wider connectivity. Moreover, a myriad of applications combine and blend different technologies and also provide access in remote locations.

Together with these technical changes, the policy environment is also evolving, as governments see the value of being connected and being in communication with their rural populations; business sees the value in engaging with rural communities as markets for telecommunications products; users are more aware of the opportunities of technologies and are ready to make the best out of them, as African mobile phone use demonstrates, showing the greatest growth of any market in the world.

In the different examples discussed in the session, there were similar elements in the approaches.

The Connect Africa project, recognizing that power is the key constraint to ICT use, has been using a zinc air fuel cell which provides a locally produced opportunity to produce cells which can power mobile equipment. This way, they provide a public payphone, which supports SMS services and allows farmers to use the systems as they wish, but through an operator, who provides a feedback service. The demand for the phone illustrates that there may be a market for cellular operators, convincing them to extend connection and offer cheaper access than the satellite. Sustainability can be ensured by marketing services to government and business on the back of the payphone service.

An example from the Caribbean showed the use of voice over internet phones. Having experimented using Skype with a PC, the project managers realized a plug in internet phone was easier to introduce. The project negotiated special costs for farmers providing subscriptions at $5/month including free SMS and lobbied to allow VOIP use.

The Pacific has special circumstances in relation to the use of ICTs for agricultural information, where infrastructure, resourcing and geographical isolation have led to the emergence of Radio, TV and satellite transmissions as the main communication platforms. Using Internet over HF radio and exchanging video and audio on tape have been the interventions used for farmers to access information. Experience has shown that in such projects, it is essential to support capacity building, disseminate information based on needs and to undertake information analysis including social and cultural concerns.

Across the seven presentations during the whole session, constraints, approaches, benefits and drawbacks of ICT adoption in rural communities where also discussed at length.

Constraints included a lack of information infrastructure, access and costs, and a clear need for content; in same cases, knowledge sharing may be limited by culture, language and literacy.

Successful approaches began with people, not with technology: “listen to the farmer” was a common call, as only true participation can lead to collective ownership and management. In several cases, public private partnerships have reduced costs and the need to lobby for policy change was emphasized by many of the speakers.

Drawbacks of ICT introduction still include costs, change in social structures and an increased demand on governments and on individuals from their extended families.

Finally the benefits for farmers providing access to markets, farming knowledge, access to resources. Efficiency benefits come with improved communication, saving unnecessary trips and economic benefits for a country can be substantial.

by Chris Addison

See presentations from the session / See video interviews with session speakers and resource persons.

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11 August 2008

Only connect? Emerging ICT options and opportunities for farmers

On 26 August, CTA will organise a special session at the upcoming IAALD/AFITA World Congress in Japan.

As a result of geographical isolation, poor communication facilities and limited purchasing power, many people working in agricultural development in ACP countries are unaware of the opportunities and resources that are potentially available to support agricultural development in ACP countries.

This is particularly true in the fast moving field of ICTs which is heavily impacting on agriculture and shows great promise for ACP states. In recent years, for instance, technological advances coupled with falling prices in hardware have led to the appearance and increasing availability of low cost mobile computers (such as the XO “$ 100” laptop from OLPC), affordable wireless connectivity together with dozens of free or very low-cost interactive web applications that greatly facilitate the processes of creating, sharing and publishing information, while at the same time profoundly changing the dynamics of collaboration and resource sharing.

An emerging interest at CTA, the “one laptop per farmer” agenda (OLPF) discussed recently at a WSIS related meeting and in recent weblog articles recognises that the host of technological and infrastructural developments is creating an environment in which devices like the XO laptop (and mobile devices such as increasingly ubiquitous mobile phones and PDA’s) can flourish. OLPC and allied technologies could therefore bring huge benefits to ACP farmers coupled with the huge opportunities for outreach for development organisations such as CTA.

This session aims to create a heightened awareness and stimulate discussion on the OLPF agenda, so as to develop concrete potential action lines in this area by CTA and its partners.

The session will combine insights and perspectives from around the world; the organisers invite comments and suggestions on the issues to be discussed and any related resources that should be considered. During the congress (24-27 August), we will publish blog reports and video interviews from this and other sessions.

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17 June 2008

NewsforDev: CTA aggregator helps track newsfeeds and more

CTA recently announced a new service for development practitioners. NewsforDev employs RSS and e-mail news technology to bring together knowledge and information for development practitioners. It cleverly tracks 600 plus newsfeed to create a number of thematic dossiers on topics like:
Each dossier presents recent content from a number of sources; A nice featire is that you can also subscribe to feeds and updates on each dossier or feed.

A very nice example of the way that information specialists can 'mash' together existing information services in an accessible format....

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26 May 2008

Learning to set agricultural information priorities

Organisations that produce agricultural information often have to satisfy very diverse needs of many categories of users. With limited resources to produce and diffuse this information, they are forced to make choices. CTA recently developed a methodology to help determine priorities for information services and their management.

The methodology has been validated, adopted and implemented by a wide range of users in various situations. The Priority Information Themes (PIT) methodology is available online as a web-based self-learning tutorial and as a series of downloadable PowerPoint-based self training materials.

The last slide of tutorial 5 summarizes the main issues covered: the rationale for setting priorities; that different target groups and goals may require different types of priorities; two different approaches to setting priorities (priority grid and weighted scoring); and two methods to evaluate implementation (logframes, logic models).

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23 April 2008

Preserving indigenous knowledge

Indigenous peoples all over the world are today using technology to record and protect their traditional knowledge and culture. Communities are gathering details on their environments and the available food sources. They are documenting and preserving agricultural methods that have been passed down through centuries. Far from being primitive, these techniques have been tried, tested and developed to perfectly suit local conditions. It is vitally important then, that this indigenous knowledge is preserved and shared for many generations to come.

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