The China Mail - Ivory Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields

USD -
AED 3.67302
AFN 69.364657
ALL 83.749224
AMD 384.778502
ANG 1.789699
AOA 916.999775
ARS 1279.000101
AUD 1.522649
AWG 1.8005
AZN 1.679702
BAM 1.67567
BBD 2.02309
BDT 121.241459
BGN 1.673495
BHD 0.377024
BIF 2985.499175
BMD 1
BND 1.283269
BOB 6.948401
BRL 5.587797
BSD 1.001992
BTN 86.089799
BWP 13.369089
BYN 3.279114
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012723
CAD 1.368675
CDF 2886.000249
CHF 0.795499
CLF 0.025238
CLP 968.480056
CNY 7.16725
CNH 7.175555
COP 4010.5
CRC 505.751066
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.472504
CZK 21.101203
DJF 178.430827
DKK 6.38445
DOP 60.367983
DZD 129.83796
EGP 49.433198
ERN 15
ETB 137.192611
EUR 0.8554
FJD 2.245203
FKP 0.74436
GBP 0.743485
GEL 2.709993
GGP 0.74436
GHS 10.420888
GIP 0.74436
GMD 71.50406
GNF 8692.783858
GTQ 7.697284
GYD 209.548697
HKD 7.850055
HNL 26.211263
HRK 6.446096
HTG 131.514126
HUF 342.569985
IDR 16269.1
ILS 3.345885
IMP 0.74436
INR 85.811023
IQD 1312.570951
IRR 42112.515562
ISK 121.820139
JEP 0.74436
JMD 160.525031
JOD 0.70897
JPY 147.642503
KES 129.195399
KGS 87.446601
KHR 4015.678883
KMF 422.249939
KPW 900.023614
KRW 1378.794987
KWD 0.30549
KYD 0.835008
KZT 525.782338
LAK 21595.733288
LBP 89777.539786
LKR 301.471502
LRD 200.897045
LSL 17.898087
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.431919
MAD 9.0157
MDL 16.973462
MGA 4438.085283
MKD 52.71703
MMK 2099.682636
MNT 3584.847314
MOP 8.101613
MRU 39.77724
MUR 45.439584
MVR 15.396617
MWK 1737.450414
MXN 18.682703
MYR 4.242498
MZN 63.959431
NAD 17.898087
NGN 1533.410108
NIO 36.875361
NOK 10.148555
NPR 137.742841
NZD 1.667655
OMR 0.384502
PAB 1.001992
PEN 3.561591
PGK 4.14423
PHP 56.725021
PKR 285.188939
PLN 3.639252
PYG 7762.332127
QAR 3.652954
RON 4.345299
RSD 100.212005
RUB 77.944798
RWF 1447.861066
SAR 3.750412
SBD 8.31956
SCR 14.679347
SDG 600.501669
SEK 9.617685
SGD 1.281045
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.458728
SLL 20969.503947
SOS 572.667221
SRD 37.205495
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.767323
SYP 13001.850206
SZL 17.894489
THB 32.417014
TJS 9.674211
TMT 3.51
TND 2.935746
TOP 2.342099
TRY 40.225435
TTD 6.801037
TWD 29.277501
TZS 2612.498647
UAH 41.903065
UGX 3590.721186
UYU 40.722606
UZS 12639.921177
VES 114.18378
VND 26135
VUV 119.503157
WST 2.744218
XAF 562.006392
XAG 0.026107
XAU 0.000297
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.698956
XOF 562.003984
XPF 102.178337
YER 241.350396
ZAR 17.781598
ZMK 9001.19996
ZMW 23.245871
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Ivory Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields
Ivory Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields / Photo: © AFP

Ivory Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields

Stopwatch in hand, dozens of Ivory Coast students raced against the clock to design robots for the farms of the future in the world's top cocoa-producing nation.

Text size:

With each team facing off to draw up the best bot blueprint, the competition is part of a broader push to tempt the west African nation's large population of young people, disillusioned with farming life, back to the plough.

Though farming has long been the pillar of Ivory Coast's economy, many young Ivorians have turned their backs on fruit-picking and tree-felling, discouraged by the hard labour and the slow pace of progress.

"I come from a family of farmers," 20-year-old student Pele Ouattara told AFP at the event in Abidjan, Ivory Coast's largest city.

"My passion for robotics grew out of my desire to improve the conditions in which my parents used to farm," he added.

On a rival team several metres away, fellow student Urielle Diaidh, 24, feared that Ivorian farming "risks dying out with time if modern technologies aren't adopted".

Dominated by the cultivation of cocoa, rubber and cashew nuts, nearly half of Ivorians with jobs work in agriculture in one way or another.

Yet the country's farms have been slow to modernise. Less than 30 percent of farms are mechanised, according to the National Centre for Agronomic Research.

And although three-quarters of Ivorians are under the age of 35, the sector is struggling to refresh an ageing workforce.

Surrounded by a flurry of tiny white robots on their circuit rounds, digital transformation engineer Paul-Marie Ouattara said he has seen "a real enthusiasm from young people" for bringing agriculture into the 21st century.

This "agriculture 4.0" that the competition wishes to promote is "improved, enhanced through new technologies, whether they be robots, drones, artificial intelligence, or data processing", the 27-year-old said.

All these "will help the farmer", insisted Ouattara, who works for a private business which sponsored the contest.

- Change, but for whom? -

Young people have not wholly given up on farming, however -- just on the old way of tilling the land.

At the Ivorian digital transition ministry, Stephane Kounandi Coulibaly, director of innovation and private sector partnerships, said he had seen a boom in agricultural start-ups.

Most of them were founded by young people, he added.

The "agritech" trend mirrors that already in motion across the continent, including in Benin, Nigeria and Kenya, with Abidjan hosting a forum for African start-ups at the beginning of July.

Ivory Coast's world-leading cocoa growers, who produce 40 percent of the global supply, are also climbing aboard.

"We have noticed the appearance of new technologies since four or five years ago," said Thibeaut Yoro, secretary-general of the national union of cocoa producers.

Yoro hailed how those shiny new gadgets helped lighten a "strenuous" job still riddled with "archaic practices".

"We dig, we hack through the bush, we harvest with machetes," he said, with planters suffering from "back aches and fatigue" as a result.

"These are things which could be changed with new technology," the trade union leader argued.

Who can afford those mod cons is another question altogether.

A pesticide-spraying drone with a capacity of 20 litres (five US gallons) can cost nine million CFA francs, or around $16,000.

That is nine times what the average farmer, owning one hectare (two-and-a-half acres) of cocoa trees, would make in six months.

- 10 minutes vs two days -

To reduce those costs, out of the reach of most farmers, a number of Ivorian enterprises offering equipment and technology for hire have sprung up.

In the verdant countryside outside of Tiassale, around 125 kilometres (78 miles) outside of Abidjan, Faustin Zongo has called in a contractor to spray his field of passion fruit plants with pesticides.

Thanks to the drone, the job took 10 minutes per hectare to complete, for the cost of around $27.

Using traditional methods, "it would take two days for each hectare", the farmer said.

By his side, Nozene Ble Binate, project manager for Investiv -- the company Zongo hired -- said that using up-to-date technology made farming "more attractive".

"More and more young people are returning to the land and reaching out to us," the 42-year-old said.

Back in Abidjan, Jool has made a business of offering ranchers software-powered analysis of their crops, with prices starting under $100.

The start-up's 32-year-old founder, Joseph-Olivier Biley -- the son of farmers himself -- boasted of his tool's ability to "know what to plant, where and how" and to "detect diseases before they strike".

With it, farmers could expect yields "optimised by more than 40 percent", Biley told AFP at Jool's offices, on the outskirts of the Ivorian economic capital.

At the digital transformation ministry, Coulibaly, the innovation chief, said the west African country plans to build a centre for manufacturing state-of-the-art inventions and training farmers in their use.

That would mean Ivorian businesses would no longer have to import their technology from abroad, often from China, he added.

N.Lo--ThChM