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You are here: Home News News Focus 'Peace cotton' smoothes its way into Benin
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02/11/2009'Peace cotton' smoothes its way into Benin

'Peace cotton' smoothes its way into Benin Organically grown cotton offers health and economic benefits to Beninese farmers.

Pendjari -- It has not rained much recently in the northern regions of Benin in West Africa; the soil is hard and cracking. But from it sprout small and precious white flowers of organic cotton.

"At the beginning, we did not think we could cultivate without fertiliser," said Michel Boundia, head of a cotton farmers association in the village of Batia, 800 kilometres (500 miles) north of the commercial capital Cotonou.

"But we soon realised that organic cotton allows us to live in better health and that is why we baptised it 'lafia cotton,'" or 'peace cotton' in the local Gourmantche dialect, the farmer said.

Some 220 Benin cotton growers went organic in 2008, cultivating 54 hectares with an average yield of 400 kilogrammes per hectare, thanks to the support of the German government and Helvetas, a Swiss non-governmental organisation.

Cootton plant in Africa

In place of fertilisers, the villagers use natural compost of organic waste and tree branches, which help fight off parasites. "Just as in the good old days, we weed with our hands or with a hoe," Boundia added.

To protect the cotton flowers, farmers have replaced industrial insecticides with an organic solution, the sap of a local plant called the neem.

A recent health ministry study showed that 322 farmers in Benin died during the 2007-2008 planting season following the use of chemical fertilisers to grow cotton.

"Here we usually receive those who are regularly using fertiliser," Eugene Zounmenou, an emergency doctor in a Cotonou hospital, told AFP.
[!break!]
"If quickly attended to, they stay alive, otherwise they die... all because of wrong information on these pesticides dangerous to humans," he said.

Alidou Boundaone, a cotton farmer, said going organic was about protecting the health of growers but also made good economic sense.

"For us, the first advantage is health. We no longer fall ill as a result of chemical products," he said.

"Secondly, and more importantly, is the economic sense: at the end of the planting season we need to pay debts contracted in buying fertilisers. That is ruinous," he added.

AFP PHOTO/AHMED OUABAThere are benefits at the retail end too. Organic cotton sells for XOF 230 (EUR 0.35, CHF 0.53) in the local currency, while non-organic fetches the farmer only about XOF 190.

Organic cotton farmers in Benin in 2008 harvested a total of seven tons of cotton. They expect to produce more than 200 tons between now and 2012.

But Benin, Africa's third-largest producer of cotton, still lacks factories that can process organic cotton separately from non-organic.

Farmers say there also needs to be a label that can guarantee a 100 percent organic origin and an outlet specifically for selling organic cotton.

"That is where our struggle begins: to find a factory that will not mix to enable us to have an identity that would lead to certification," said Djafarou Tiomoko, director of Pendjari National Park and an advocate of organic cotton.

Text: Fiacre Vidjingninou / AFP / Expatica 2009



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