Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa

Abstract This study undertakes an ex‐ante evaluation of the effects of alternative technology and policy options on soybean supply and demand in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) to 2050. Current soybean consumption in SSA is dominated by cooking oil followed by soybean cake used as animal feed. Due to weak...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sika Gbegbelegbe, Arega Alene, Alpha Kamara, Keith Wiebe, Victor Manyong, Tahirou Abdoulaye, Petros Mkandawire
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-11-01
Series:Food and Energy Security
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.172
id doaj-452742f2091a4f1c988f38af6c137783
record_format Article
spelling doaj-452742f2091a4f1c988f38af6c1377832021-06-16T06:05:43ZengWileyFood and Energy Security2048-36942019-11-0184n/an/a10.1002/fes3.172Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan AfricaSika Gbegbelegbe0Arega Alene1Alpha Kamara2Keith Wiebe3Victor Manyong4Tahirou Abdoulaye5Petros Mkandawire6International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Lilongwe MalawiInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Lilongwe MalawiInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Kano NigeriaInternational Food Policy Research Institute Washington District of ColumbiaInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Dar es Salaam TanzaniaInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Ibadan NigeriaInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) Lilongwe MalawiAbstract This study undertakes an ex‐ante evaluation of the effects of alternative technology and policy options on soybean supply and demand in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) to 2050. Current soybean consumption in SSA is dominated by cooking oil followed by soybean cake used as animal feed. Due to weak processing sectors and low soybean yields, the region is currently importing about 70% of its consumption requirements. Based on the results from a geospatial bio‐economic modeling framework, soybean consumption in SSA is projected to more than double by 2050 compared to 2010 due in part to a rising population and rising incomes. On the other hand, supply from domestic production is projected to increase by 80% over the same period. Hence, by 2050, net imports into SSA would be nearly 4 times higher than supply from domestic production. Under a future drier climate, some of the production gains achieved through soybean research and extension would be lost and this would further worsen the soybean demand gap in SSA relative to the baseline. This study shows that relying on conventional breeding alone to increase soybean yields in SSA would not be enough to substantially reduce the future demand gap. A combination of promising innovations affecting the soybean value chain across SSA would be needed to close the soybean demand gap in SSA by 2050 under a drier future climate.https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.172climate changegeospatial bio‐economic modelingIMPACTimport dependencysoybeansub‐Saharan Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sika Gbegbelegbe
Arega Alene
Alpha Kamara
Keith Wiebe
Victor Manyong
Tahirou Abdoulaye
Petros Mkandawire
spellingShingle Sika Gbegbelegbe
Arega Alene
Alpha Kamara
Keith Wiebe
Victor Manyong
Tahirou Abdoulaye
Petros Mkandawire
Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
Food and Energy Security
climate change
geospatial bio‐economic modeling
IMPACT
import dependency
soybean
sub‐Saharan Africa
author_facet Sika Gbegbelegbe
Arega Alene
Alpha Kamara
Keith Wiebe
Victor Manyong
Tahirou Abdoulaye
Petros Mkandawire
author_sort Sika Gbegbelegbe
title Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
title_short Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
title_full Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐Saharan Africa
title_sort ex‐ante evaluation of promising soybean innovations for sub‐saharan africa
publisher Wiley
series Food and Energy Security
issn 2048-3694
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract This study undertakes an ex‐ante evaluation of the effects of alternative technology and policy options on soybean supply and demand in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) to 2050. Current soybean consumption in SSA is dominated by cooking oil followed by soybean cake used as animal feed. Due to weak processing sectors and low soybean yields, the region is currently importing about 70% of its consumption requirements. Based on the results from a geospatial bio‐economic modeling framework, soybean consumption in SSA is projected to more than double by 2050 compared to 2010 due in part to a rising population and rising incomes. On the other hand, supply from domestic production is projected to increase by 80% over the same period. Hence, by 2050, net imports into SSA would be nearly 4 times higher than supply from domestic production. Under a future drier climate, some of the production gains achieved through soybean research and extension would be lost and this would further worsen the soybean demand gap in SSA relative to the baseline. This study shows that relying on conventional breeding alone to increase soybean yields in SSA would not be enough to substantially reduce the future demand gap. A combination of promising innovations affecting the soybean value chain across SSA would be needed to close the soybean demand gap in SSA by 2050 under a drier future climate.
topic climate change
geospatial bio‐economic modeling
IMPACT
import dependency
soybean
sub‐Saharan Africa
url https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.172
work_keys_str_mv AT sikagbegbelegbe exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT aregaalene exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT alphakamara exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT keithwiebe exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT victormanyong exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT tahirouabdoulaye exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
AT petrosmkandawire exanteevaluationofpromisingsoybeaninnovationsforsubsaharanafrica
_version_ 1721375483783806976