杏吧原创

Can beer bottle tops help to rescue Africa’s soil?

The caps are just the right size for measuring out doses of ammonium nitrate fertiliser to feed plants growing in the continent's impoverished soil

SOMETIMES low tech is much better than no tech. A simple, affordable way to apply crop fertiliser directly to plants looks set to revolutionise the way poor farmers in sub-Saharan Africa grow food. And it all hinges on beer bottle tops.

This week, African heads of state meet in Abuja, Nigeria, for a summit on the continent鈥檚 deepening soil fertility crisis. Three-quarters of the soil in sub-Saharan Africa is severely depleted of nutrients, because farmers do not use fertiliser or spread manure.

The summit aims to hatch a soil rescue plan, and this is where the beer-bottle tops may well play an unexpected role. They make ideal measuring pots for 鈥渕icro-dosing鈥, a technique that lets farmers focus precious nutrients where they are needed rather than wasting them. The results so far are encouraging.

鈥淭ops make ideal pots for measuring out nutrients where they are needed鈥

Having pinpointed a lack of nitrates as the main factor limiting yields in southern Africa, Steve Twomlow of the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), based in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, established that about 5 grams of ammonium nitrate is enough to feed three plants: that鈥檚 one beer cap full. Conventional scattering of fertiliser uses five capfuls for every three plants.

For sorghum and pearl millet, Twomlow found that dabbing the fertiliser dose around the base of a plant once it is knee-high boosts yields by between 30 and 50 per cent. 鈥淣early every treated farm in our trials gave positive yield increases,鈥 says Twomlow.

In parallel trials in western Africa, where lack of phosphates was the limiting factor, the problem could be corrected by giving each plant a 鈥渢hree-finger pinch鈥 containing 2 grams of diammonium phosphate, plus a gram or so of urea.

Here yields for pearl millet and sorghum rose by up to 120 per cent, boosting farmers鈥 incomes by up to 134 per cent.

For micro-dosing to work, though, ICRISAT is pressing agribusinesses to make fertiliser available in smaller, more affordable packets. This is expected to be another focus of the Abuja summit.