If Eating is “Cool” then Farming must be “Cool” too
Thu, 04/20/2017
Most youths’ perception
of agriculture and agribusiness reflects the image of a dirty, exhausted poor
farmer carrying a rusty hoe on puffy, tired shoulders somewhere on the
outskirts of modernity.
This old-fashioned
guy is not conceivably on Snapchat, Tweeter, or Instagram. Perhaps this is the
reason farming is not “cool” to young people? Nonetheless, since young people
enjoy eating food, in an equal measure they must partake in the production of
food—growing it, investing in it, producing it, processing it, packaging it,
distributing it, marketing it, and sustaining it.
What an exciting
time! Massive technologies and markets present farming with opportunities. More
to the point, challenges facing agriculture and agribusiness offer creative
minds similar advantages. Advanced, user-friendly apps that link farmers to
consumers are lacking. Websites, magazines, newspapers, and books offering
agriculture and agribusiness information are scarce.
Yet they are
necessary: agriculture- and agribusiness-related training centers need to be
set up for new entrants. Storage facilities are in high demand but largely
unavailable. Crop and seed selection mechanisms need innovation. Effective land
preparation and efficient irrigation services are not enough to meet demand.
Factories for food processing and packaging are scarce. Distribution channels
and marketing need a boost. And did you know that consumers of agricultural
products would pay for consumption guidance?
Imagine that we
probably don’t even have young agricultural researchers! In terms of transport,
farmers continue to wait for the day an entrepreneur makes refrigerated
trailers abundant. In Information Technology, farmers want to possess a mobile
device to enable them to track down the growth of their crops, spot possible
crop threats beforehand, and be able to perform basic work on their farms, all
while enjoying the comfort of their homes.
Take this example;
in Rwanda, consumers of traditional beverages, namely “Urwarwa”
(produced out of ripe bananas), and “Ikigage, Ubushera, Umusururu”
(produced out of sorghum) have given up drinking their favorite beverages
because of the basic way they are produced, packaged, and can’t be stored.
Isn’t this a huge opportunity for young creative minds out there? Just come up
with innovative methods to better produce, suitably package, and efficiently
store and market the above traditional beverages. A cooperative of ten youths
should undertake this opportunity. Success is guaranteed!
Take this example.
After graduating from Mount Kenya University, Gerald Mutema decided to start a
piggery with five pigs on an investment of 500,000 Rwandan francs ($590).
According to his calculations, by the end of next year, the pigs will have
grown to number a thousand and be making him millions of francs in revenue.
I hereby press the
call-to-action button. I challenge you to pause and reflect a while on this
enlightening question: if agriculture were one among us, if we let her die,
what will happen to us? Do you see how the survival of humanity depends on the
survival of farming? If you care strongly enough for your children and their
grandchildren, now is the time to engage in agriculture and agribusiness.
I choose to Farm, what
about you?
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