Main content

Shepherd's eye in the sky

Africa's 250 million pastoralists provide half its meat and three-quarters of its milk - yet remain invisible. Bola Mosuro meets the nomadic herders pioneering climate solutions.

Africa's 250 million nomadic herders, or pastoralists, are the invisible keystone of the continent's food system. They provide 50% of Africa's meat and 75% of its milk, moving livestock across vast rangelands in response to seasons, weather and grazing patterns that have sustained communities for millennia.

Yet pastoralists are routinely dismissed as backwards, a relic in the way of progress and modernisation. Climate change, land grabs, and conflict force them off ancestral routes. Their knowledge is often ignored, their contribution unrecognised.

But in the UN International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists, a different story emerges - one where these herders are not obstacles to climate solutions but pioneers of them.

Bola Mosuro speaks with pastoralists using informal collectives and cutting-edge digital technology like the Shepherd's Eye In The Sky satellite systems that track grazing, predict drought, and help communities adapt to a rapidly changing climate. These are not romantic traditions; they are living, evolving systems that could offer crucial lessons for sustainable food production worldwide.

With Sarli Sadu Nana, Dr Dorice Agol, Joshua Laizer, Tahira Mohamed, Mark Kaigwa and Aminu Nyako.

Presenter: Bola Mosuro
Producer: Alexandra Quinn and Freya Hellier
Executive producer: Rami Tzabar
A Loftus Media Production for 麻豆社 World Service

Thanks to SPARC (Supporting Pastoralism and Agriculture in Recurrent and Protracted Crises)

(Photo Joshua Laizer feeds his goats some leaves. Credit: Mathias Tooko)

Available now

50 minutes

Last on

Thursday 00:06GMT

Broadcasts

  • Last Saturday 12:06GMT
  • Last Sunday 03:06GMT
  • Last Sunday 14:06GMT
  • Last Sunday 17:06GMT
  • Wednesday 10:06GMT
  • Thursday 00:06GMT