CSIR introduces new technology to help farmers prevent crop diseases

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The Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) has introduced an early detection technology known as ‘Spore Smart Collector’ to help farmers identify crop diseases before they spread.A demonstration meeting brought together farmers, Agricultural Extension Officers, Directors from the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA), and research scientists to discuss the benefits and possible rollout of the technology.Country Lead and a Senior Research Scientist, Dr Kwesi Atta Aidoo Snr, explained that the SporeSmart Collector “captures fungal spores within the environment. So in the lab, we can detect the kind of disease that can happen in the field.”He said the device collects fungal spores from the air on farms, and samples are sent to the laboratory for analysis. This allows experts to detect potential diseases early and advise farmers on preventive action before crops are affected.Dr Aidoo also addressed concerns about the security of the device when installed on farms.“Security-wise, we haven’t recorded anything yet in Ghana. For the commercial farmer, it will be in the field, which is being fenced, and there will be a security person or somebody in the field. For security-wise in terms of theft and all that, I don’t think there’s a problem because it’s already in Brazil on the field and they haven’t recorded any theft as yet and we hope that here in Ghana too we’ll not record anything like that,” he added.Luke Murrell of MMV Sense in the UK, who participated in the demonstration, highlighted key challenges that must be addressed before the technology can be expanded nationwide.“One would be training. Because if we’re going to go from one small installation to many, many thousands of farms, there’s a big training activity that needs to be done, particularly with extension officers,” he said.He also pointed to financing and building a sustainable service model as important steps for scaling up the project.“One’s going to be financing the programme, financing the creation of a service. So I think it’s about finding the right partners, finding the right funding models, and a way to pay for this type of service,” he explainedDiscussions have been held with the Ministry of Food and Agriculture on possible support, including private-public partnership models. For now, the focus remains on piloting the Spore Smart technology in selected farming communities before expanding it across the country.