Experiences in uptake and implementation of biofortified crops

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Experiences in uptake and implementation of biofortified crops Andrew Westby, Director Natural Resources Institute University of Greenwich

Transcript of Experiences in uptake and implementation of biofortified crops

Experiences in uptake and implementation of biofortified cropsAndrew Westby, DirectorNatural Resources InstituteUniversity of Greenwich

NRI work on biofortification• Led marketing and product

development component of reaching end-user with orange fleshed sweet potato project.

• Retention of betacarotene during processing and storage of biofortified sweetpoato and cassava.

• Consumer acceptability and willingness to pay for biofortified crops

Orange sweet potato (OSP)in Uganda & Mozambique

• Acceptability of OSP compered with existing white varieties.

• Different colour, lower dry matter• Supports implementations strategies• 475 consumers in rural and urban

locations in Uganda• Consumers willing to pay more for orange• 82% of consumers found orange

acceptable • 23% more acceptable than white • 18% it was not acceptable

Rural / urban differences

Socio-economic factors and location affecting OSP acceptability

Acceptance was related to socio-economic factors and location

•All likers = consumed sweet potato the most frequently, were farmers, less affluent and least likely to buy at the market•Orange likers = more affluent and buy from markets

Orange maize in Zambia

• Explored how much consumers in rural Zambia will pay for orange maize which contains pro-vitamin A. Will consumers confuse with yellow maize (drought food)?

• Surveyed 478 respondents in Central and Southern provinces of rural Zambia.

• Explored nutrition messages by different methods (radio or community leader)

Orange maize – acceptance tests

• No nutrition message - orange maize acceptable to 86% of consumers

• With nutrition message – acceptable to 98%

• 20% did not like yellow. • 10-20% liked orange> white or

yellow• No effect of age• No effect of gender• No effect of how eaten• Differences by district

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None Radio Community

White-likers (8%)

Indifferent-likers (50%)

Yellow-dislikers (25%)

Orange-likers (16%)

Effect of Nutrition information

Willingness to pay - maize

• No information, amount paid for orange similar to white.• Nutrition information resulted in improved acceptance and a

15% increase in willingness to pay for orange• Method of giving information (community leaders or radio) not

important.• Overcoming ‘novelty effect’

Yellow cassava in Nigeria (2012-14)

• Consumer acceptability (n=122 consumers) of eba and fufu• Acceptability 9 point-scale: YC (7.4) > white cassava (6.6) > palm oil

eba (4.9) • YC products liked by all.• Drivers for uptake: smoothness; yellow colour and mouldable;

good for children’s health and for eye sight

High iron beans in Rwanda

• Invisible trait -testing can consumers tell the difference?

• Compared local varieties with new high iron. Explored appearance (point of sale) and taste of cooked beans.

• Appearance and taste - not related to the iron content.

• Unlikely consumers can differentiate beans of differing iron levels by sensory factors.

• Some iron bean have clear visual traits (appearance, shape or size), these could be used to brand that variety.

Summary

• Visible trait is not a barrier to acceptance and helps to brand the product

• Invisible trait of high iron beans is not a barrier - uptake due to other factors such as yield improvements for farmers.