Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa (PACA)
Dangerous aflatoxins in key staple crops threaten the lives of people and livestock across the African continent. Starting in 2011, a broad range of stakeholders banded together to fight back.
Focus Areas
Food Systems
Health and Wellbeing
In 2011, African leaders came together to improve food safety in service of greater health and productivity across the continent. They recognized that aflatoxins, a longstanding hazard in various African staple crops, posed a serious threat to human life, animal welfare, and the wider economy. With support and facilitation from Meridian, the African Union Commission (AUC) developed and launched the Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa (PACA). PACA is an African-led, African-owned initiative that works to minimize the harmful presence of aflatoxins in the foods that millions depend on to survive.
Aflatoxins, produced by molds in grains and other common crops, cause serious illness and death in people and livestock. They also cost Africans $670 million annually in lost export potential. To combat these issues, the AUC’s members needed to identify effective responses at multiple points within complex agricultural value chains. To do so, they needed a guide who could navigate a variety of viewpoints and needs, building ownership and commitment within a network of geographically dispersed stakeholders.
Meridian, with our track record of successfully supporting similar efforts, emerged as the AUC’s ideal partner for designing a continent-wide initiative to address the challenges of aflatoxin contamination. Today, the AUC works with a committee of government officials, farmers’ organizations, consumer advocates, researchers, technology organizations, private sector representatives, and public health professionals. As PACA progresses toward its vision, more and more Africans reap the benefits of increased economic potential and critical relief from aflatoxin-related health challenges. PACA’s success also serves as a powerful model for managing other food safety issues across the continent.
More About Aflatoxins
Aflatoxins are dangerous organic compounds, produced by two species of Aspergillus mold. They mainly show up in grains and other crops, including maize, groundnuts, coffee, cassava, and cocoa; once they appear, they create a chain of devastating public health and economic consequences. Within the first link in the food chain, their presence causes farmers to discard their crops and lose access to markets when they can’t meet local and international safety standards. This loss hits small-scale farmers especially hard.
From there, aflatoxins pose an acute threat to humans and animals who consume contaminated grains—in fact, they’re widely recognized as the most pervasive food safety threat in Africa. Millions of Africans are exposed to unsafe levels of aflatoxins through the foods they eat: 40% of the commodities found in local markets contain levels of aflatoxins that exceed safe limits. The harmful effects for humans include illness and death through increased liver disease, cancer, stunted development, and immune system suppression; aflatoxin contamination contributes to 30% of liver cancer cases on the continent. Livestock also suffer after ingesting contaminated feed.
Project Team
Learn more about the team that led the Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa project.