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Potential for production and use of liquid biofuels as a strategy for developing green and circular economies in Southern Africa

Type
File
Date of Publication
Feb 20, 2026
Description/Abstract

The Southern African Development Community (SADC) responded to global calls to address environmental challenges such as high greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions through the use of liquid biofuels. This study assessed the potential of liquid biofuel production in the SADC region with data collected in Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe. The results showed that the liquid biofuel industry is struggling. Countries do not have enough resources to support the industry effectively and there is overreliance on international sponsors. In terms of policy and regulatory frameworks most countries are doing well. However, these policies are not implemented effectively. Most countries use sugar-cane to produce bioethanol. Over the years countries, such as Malawi, have attempted to incorporate crops such as cassava (Manihot esculenta) and castor bean (Ricinus communis). Although the industry is not performing well it has contributed massively to livelihood development in all the region

Author or Institution as Author
Prof Cliff Dlamini
Co-authors

RP Tshidzumba, T Gotore, G Kabia, RSM Munjoyo & D Kachamba

Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

CS Dlamini, RP Tshidzumba, T Gotore, G Kabia, RSM Munjoyo & D Kachamba (17 Feb 2026): Potential for production and use of liquid biofuels as a strategy for developing green and circular economies in Southern Africa, Southern Forests: a Journal of Forest Science, DOI: 10.2989/20702620.2025.2567051

Contact Information

* Corresponding author: CDlamini@ccardesa.org.

Skills Gap and Implications of Scrapping of Certificates and Diplomas in Universities on Agricultural Production in the SADC Region: A General Overview

Type
File
Date of Publication
Feb 20, 2026
Description/Abstract

Agricultural productivity in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is currently undermined by a structural "inverted skills pyramid" resulting from "academicization"—the systematic phasing out of certificate and diploma programs in favour of university degrees. This review employs a Systematic Narrative Synthesis (SNS) of literature and institutional reports from 2021–2025 to evaluate the consequences of this shift across all 16 SADC member states. The findings reveal that while the region produces an oversupply of theoretically grounded degree holders, it faces a critical shortage of field-ready technicians capable of managing irrigation, mechanization, and the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) technologies. In the absence of formal technical pathways, the "technical cadre" has been replaced by fragmented industry-led academies, donor-funded stop-gap programs, and an aging experiential workforce. Comparative analysis with dual-track models in Germany and Brazil suggests that SADC’s current trajectory limits 4IR adoption and food security. The paper recommends an immediate restoration of autonomous technical colleges and the institutionalization of industry- Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) co-governance to bridge the widening skills gap.

Author or Institution as Author
Prof. Cliff Dlamini
Co-authors

Mr. Stanley Dlamini

Language
Topic
Category
Resource Type
Citation

 Dlamini C and Dlamini S (2026) Skills Gap and Implications of Scrapping of Certificates and Diplomas in Universities on Agricultural Production in the SADC Region: A General Overview. Environmental Science Archives 5(1): 166-17

Contact Information

Centre for Coordination of Agricultural Research and Development for Southern Africa (CARDESA), Plot 4701 Mmaraka Road, Private Bag 00357, Gaborone, Botswana 2Agriculture and Environmental Consultant, Herefords Matfuntini, PO Box 7514-Manzini-M200, Eswatini *Correspondence for materials should be addressed to CD (email: cliffsdlamini@ymail.com)

The Impact of Scrapping of Certificates and Diplomas in Universities on the Performance of Forestry Sector: Regional and International Perspective

Type
File
Date of Publication
Feb 20, 2026
Description/Abstract

The forestry sector in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is seeing fewer fieldready technical workers, even as university forestry programs grow. This paper looks at how putting more focus on academic forestry training has changed the workforce, operations, and skill development in the area. By systematically reviewing 15 documents from 2021 to 2025, like skills audits, qualification standards, industry reports, and global comparisons, this study puts together information about the topic. The results show a reversed skills situation, where there are too many university graduates but not enough technicians with practical, on-the-job skills. This issue has raised training expenses for employers, reduced how much they can produce, and slowed down the use of new forestry technologies. Looking at Europe and Latin America, we see that systems that keep separate technical training tracks in two-track education models do a better job at running things efficiently and letting workers move around easily. The paper ends by saying that bringing back diploma-level technical training inside a standard SADC Qualifications Framework, along with ways to recognize past learning and joint public-private management, is key to bringing back lasting, competitive forestry production in Southern Africa.

Author or Institution as Author
Prof. Cliff Dlamini
Co-authors

Mr.  Stanley Dlamini

Language
Topic
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Dlamini C and Dlamini S (2026) The Impact of Scrapping of Certificates and Diplomas in Universities on the Performance of Forestry Sector: Regional and International Perspective. EnvironmentalScience Archives 5(1): 115-126

Contact Information

1Centre for Coordination of Agricultural Research and Development for Southern Africa (CARDESA), Plot 4701 Mmaraka Road, Private Bag 00357, Gaborone, Botswana 2Agriculture and Environmental Consultant, Herefords Matfuntini Near New School, P.O. Box 7514-Manzini-M200, Eswatini *Correspondence for materials should be addressed to CD (email: cliffsdlamini@ymail.com)

Plano de Gestão Ambiental e Social - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

Plano de Gestão Ambiental e Social - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Author or Institution as Author
Instituto de Investigação Agronómica (IIA)
Category

Plano de Gestão de Resíduos - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

Plano de Gestão de Resíduos - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Author or Institution as Author
Instituto de Investigação Agronómica (IIA)
Language
Category

Plano de Gestão de Água - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

Plano de Gestão de Água - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Author or Institution as Author
Instituto de Investigação Agronómica (IIA)
Category

Estudo de Impacto Ambiental e Social - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

Estudo de Impacto Ambiental e Social - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Author or Institution as Author
Instituto de Investigação Agronómica (IIA)
Category

Plano de Gestão da Biodiversidade - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Type
Date of Publication
Oct 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

Plano de Gestão da Biodiversidade - Centro Regional de Liderança da Mandioca: Malanje-Angola

Author or Institution as Author
Instituto de Investigação Agronómica (IIA)
Language
Category

Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) HandBook

Type
File
Date of Publication
Aug 01, 2023
Description/Abstract

This Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) handbook has been developed as a resource material for use by CSA practitioners in providing training, policy advocacy, and upscaling CSA technologies and practices for improving sustainable productivity, adapting to the effects of climate change, and mitigating climate change.

Author or Institution as Author
CCARDESA
Co-authors

AICCRA, CGIAR, GCCA+

Institution
CCARDESA
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

CCARDESA (2023), Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Handbook (1st ed.) Gaborone, Botswana.

VARIETY CATALOGUE OF GROUNDNUTS (Arachis Hypogaea) IN TANZANIA

Date of Publication
Dec 01, 2022
Description/Abstract

Groundnuts (Arachis Hypogaea) in Tanzania

In Tanzania, where groundnut is one of the main annual crops, the production cost of groundnut is cheaper than of other annual crops like rice (Akpo, Muricho, et al., 2020; Bakari et al., 2021). The total production cost of groundnut ranges from 500,000 TZS/ha to 1,000,000 TZS/ha compared to rice, which ranges from 2,500,000 TZS/ha to 3,250,000 TZS/ha (Ndabila, 2018). Groundnut can be produced in all areas with an altitude below 1500m and having alluvial soils (Daudi et al., 2012). In Tanzania, groundnut is mainly produced in Dodoma, Tabora, Geita, Shinyanga, Songwe Mbeya, Katavi, Singida, Rukwa and Manyara regions (URT, 2021). Likewise, groundnut is largely produced in Kigoma, Mwanza, Mtwara, Simiyu and Kagera. Most of these regions are either semi-arid or arid and mostly challenged by drought, food insecurity and poverty.

 

Currently, the country needs to cope with increasing drought due to climate change, market shift, and other biotic and abiotic stresses (Zurich, 2014). In addressing these challenges for improving people’s livelihood, Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TARI) in collaboration with other development partners released 17 improved groundnut varieties (Mwalongo et al., 2020). Six improved groundnut varieties were release between 1960s and 1990s (Daudi et al., 2012). The outcomes, however, were below expectations attaining maximum average productivity of 444 kg/ha during the period. Thereafter, 11 more improved varieties were released, and productivity increased to an average of 745 kg/ha. This is still less than the average productivity of Africa, which is 800kg/ha (FAO, 2020). Even though the new varieties were available, it was reported that about 81% of the groundnut producers still use old varieties, which are less resistant to drought and diseases, have low productivity between (0.5t/ha to 1t/ha) against the potential yield of between (1-2t/ha) and low market value (Mwakimata, 2017).

 

Limited use of improved varieties by farmers was reported as one of the major bottlenecks to realize high yield in the country (Daudi et al. 2018; Akpo et al. 2020). Use of improved varieties will make ever lasting effects on peoples’ health, financial power and human resource capacity of the country. Studies illustrate that the groundnut market is expanding in Tanzania due to a rapid population growth rate of 3.1 per year, multiple uses of groundnut and exports of about 20,000 tons per year (URT, 2020). All these factors combined raised an alarm of increasing awareness and use of improved groundnut varieties.

 

This variety catalogue underscores the important characteristics of all the released groundnut varieties since 1960s to date, an effort to enhance stakeholders’ awareness and groundnut utilization along the value chain in Tanzania.

Groundnuts (Arachis Hypogaea) Varieties Released in Tanzania

Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TARI) in collaboration with Development Partners released 17 improved groundnut varieties (Mwalongo et al., 2020). Six improved groundnut varieties were release between 1960s and 1990s (Daudi et al., 2012). The description of the varieties have been provided in the document.

Author or Institution as Author
Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TARI)
Co-authors

Daudi, H., Lukurugu, G., Bujiku, A., Binagwa, P. and Kasuga, R. (2022). Variety Catalogue of Groundnuts (Arachis Hypogae) in Tanzania.  TARI Research Publication No.2

Institution
Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute
Language
Category
Resource Type
Citation

Daudi, H., Lukurugu, G., Bujiku, A., Binagwa, P. and Kasuga, R. (2022). Variety Catalogue of Groundnuts (Arachis Hypogae) in Tanzania.  TARI Research Publication No.2

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