background image

 

 

Jatropha curcas L. in Africa 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

Assessment of the impact of the dissemination of “the Jatropha System” 

on the ecology of the rural area and the social and economic situation of 

the rural population (target group) in selected countries in Africa 

 
 
 
 

Case study by 

baganí, 

Reinhard K. Henning, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

Tel: +49 8389 984129, e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

  

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

2

0.0 Content 

 

0.0 Content

.......................................................................................................................... 2 

0.1 Abbreviations

............................................................................................................... 3 

1. Description of the plant, distribution, ecology

..................................................... 4 

1.1 Botanical description.................................................................................................... 4 
1.2 Distribution................................................................................................................... 5 
1.3 Ecology......................................................................................................................... 6 

2. Description of the Jatropha System

........................................................................ 6 

2.1 The Jatropha System .................................................................................................... 6 
2.2 Possible Uses of the Jatropha Plant.............................................................................. 6 

3. Jatropha promotion in selected countries

............................................................. 7 

3.0 Benin ............................................................................................................................ 7 
3.1 Egypt ............................................................................................................................ 7 
3.2 Ethiopia ........................................................................................................................ 7 
3.3 Ghana ........................................................................................................................... 7 
3.4 Guinea (Conakry) ......................................................................................................... 7 
3.5 Madagascar................................................................................................................... 7 
3.6 Mali .............................................................................................................................. 7 
3.7 Mozambique................................................................................................................. 8 
3.8 Namibia ........................................................................................................................ 9 
3.9 Senegal ......................................................................................................................... 9 
3.10 South Africa ............................................................................................................... 9 
3.11 Sudan .......................................................................................................................... 9 
3.12 Tanzania ................................................................................................................... 10 
3.13 Uganda ..................................................................................................................... 12 
3.14 Zambia...................................................................................................................... 13 
3.15 Zimbabwe................................................................................................................. 13 

4. Impacts of the promotion of the use of Jatropha

............................................... 14 

4.1 Social impacts ............................................................................................................ 14 
4.2 Ecological impacts ..................................................................................................... 16 
4.3 Economic impacts ...................................................................................................... 17 

5. Critical assessment of the Jatropha System, based on findings

.................. 24 

Soap production: .............................................................................................................. 24 
Jatropha oil as fuel: .......................................................................................................... 25 
Jatropha plantations:......................................................................................................... 25 
Gender Aspects: ............................................................................................................... 25 

6. Bibliography

................................................................................................................. 27 

7. Attachments:

................................................................................................................ 27 

Annex 1 - ToR of Jatropha Case Study

................................................................. 28 

Annex 2 - Jatropha in Ghana

.................................................................................... 30 

Annex 3 - BUN Zimbabwe

....................................................................................... 32 

Annex 4 - Environment Africa

................................................................................. 34 

Annex 5 - Jatropha KwaZulu-Natal

........................................................................ 36 

Annex 6 - Wiemer, Summary of Economic Analysis

........................................ 37 

Annex 7 - Economic analysis of soap production in Tanzania

........................ 39 

Annex 8 - Economy of Jatropha utilization in Zambia

...................................... 40 

Annex 9 - Wasteland rehabilitation

........................................................................ 43 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

3

Annex 10 - The role of Jatropha in of Carbon sequestration

........................... 44 

Annex 11 - Small scale farms with Jatropha hedges in Mozambique

........... 45 

Annex 12 - Agricultural Calendar of Mali

............................................................ 46 

Annex 13 - Enterprise of Trust – Title page

......................................................... 47 

Annex 14 - Paper for Public Field Day in KwaZulu/Natal

............................... 48 

 

 

0.1 Abbreviations 

 
ARI-Monduli   

Alternative resources of income for Monduli women 

ATI 

 

 

Appropriate Technology International, an US American NGO 

BftW   

 

Bread for the World 

BUN 

  Biomass 

Users 

Network 

CNESOLER   

Centre National d’Energie Solaire et des Energies Renouvelables,  

Bamako, Mali 

DAEA  

 

Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs, South  

Africa 

DED 

  German 

Development 

Service 

DMA 

  Division 

Machinisme 

Agricole 

ELCT   

 

Evangelical Lutheren Church of Tanzania 

GTZ   

 

German Agency for Technological Co-operation 

JCL 

 

 

In English language used abbreviation of

 Jatropha curcas L.

 

KAKUTE 

 

Private firm in Arusha, Tanzania, to disseminate Jatropa 

KZA 

  KwaZulu-Natal 

MFP 

  Multi 

Functional 

Platform 

OSCA  

 

Owen Sithole Agricultural College, Empageni, KZA, SA 

POPA   

 

Plant Oil Producers Association, Zimbabwe 

SA 

  South 

Africa 

SUDERETA  

Sustainable Development through Renewable Energies in Tanzania 

TZS 

  Tanzanian 

Shillings 

UNDP  

 

United Nations Development Programme 

UNIDO 

 

United Nations Industrial Development Organisation 

USD 

  United 

States 

Dollar 

ZMK 

  Zambian 

Kwacha 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

4

1. Description of the plant, distribution, ecology 

 

Jatropha curcas L. or physic nut, is a bush or small tree (up to 5 m hight) and belongs to the 
euphorbia family. The genus Jatropha contains approximately 170 known species. The genus 
name Jatropha derives from the Greek 

jatrós

 (doctor), 

trophé

 (food), which implies medicinal 

uses. Curcas is the common name for physic nut in Malabar, India. 

The plant is planted as a hedge (living fence) by farmers all over the world, because it is not 
browsed by animals 
 

 

About 1 1/2 year old plant in test 

plantation, KwaZulu-Natal, South 

Africa 

 

35 year old Jatropha trees in Falan, 

Mali 

 

Jatroph hedge in Mto Wa Mbu, 

Tanzania

 

1.1 Botanical description 
 

 

 

Inflorescence containing male and female flowers

 

 
Jatropha curcas L., or physic nut, has thick glabrous branchlets. The tree has a straight trunk 
and gray or reddish bark, masked by large white patches. It has green leaves with a length and 
width of 6 to 15 cm, with 5 to 7 shallow lobes. The leaves are arranged alternately. 

Dormancy is induced by fluctuations in rainfall and temperature/light. But not all trees 
respond simultainously. In a hedge you may have branches without leaves, and besides ones 
full of green leaves. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

5

The branches contain a whitish latex, which causes brown stains, which are very difficult to 
remove.  

Normally, five roots are formed from seeds: one tap root and 4 lateral roots. Plants from 
cuttings develop only lateral roots. 

Inflorescences are formed terminally on branches. The 
plant is monoecious and flowers are unisexual. 
Pollination is by insects. 

After pollination, a trilocular ellipsoidal fruit is formed. 
The exocarp remains fleshy until the seeds are mature. 
The seeds are black and in the average 18 mm long (11 – 
30) and 10 mm wide (7 – 11). The seed weight (per 1000) 
is about 727 g, this are 1375 seeds per kg in the average. 

The life-span of the Jatropha curcas plant is more than 50 
years. 

Varieties 

The Jatropha variety in Nicaragua has fewer, but larger fruits. The yield per ha seems to be 
the same.  

A non-toxic variety exists in Mexico which is used for 
human consumption after roasting. It does not contain 
Phorbol esters. (“This non-toxic variety of Jatropha 
could be a potential source of oil for human 
consumption, and the seed cake can be a good protein 
source for humans as well as for livestock.”, Becker et 
al, 1999). 

1.2 Distribution 

 

                   

Main distribution areas of Jatropha curcas (green) 

 

Jatropha curcas originates from Cental America.  

From the Caribbean, Jatropha curcas was probably distributed by Portuguese seafarers via the 
Cape Verde Islands and former Portuguese Guinea (now Guinea Bissau) to other countries in 
Africa and Asia. Today it is cultivated in almost all tropical and subtropical countries as 
protection hedges around gardens and fields, since it it not browsed by cattle. 

ripe Jatropha fruits

 

 

Jatropha seeds from Mali (left) and Nicaragua

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

6

 

1.3 Ecology 

Jatropha curcas L. is not a weed. It is not self propagating. It has to be planted. 

It grows well with more than 600 mm of rainfall per year, and it withstands long drought 
periods. With less than 600 mm it cannot grow except in special conditions like on Cape 
Verde Islands, where the rainfall is only 250 mm, but the humidity of the air is very high (rain 
harvesting). 

It cannot stand frost. It survives a very light frost, but it looses all leaves. The production of 
seeds will probably go down sharply. 

 

2. Description of the Jatropha System 

2.1 The Jatropha System 

The Jatropha System is an integrated rural development approach. By planting Jatropha 
hedges to protect gardens and fields against roaming animals, the oil from the seeds can be 
used for soap production, for lighting and cooking and as fuel in special diesel engines. In this 
way the Jatropha System covers 4 main aspects of rural development: 

 

 

promotion of women (local soap production); 

 

 

poverty reduction (protecting crops and selling seeds, oil and soap). 

 

 

erosion control (planting hedges); 

 

 

energy supply for the household and stationary engines in the rural area; 

The obvious advantage of this system is that all the processing procedure, and thus all added 
value, can be kept within the rural area or even within one village. No centralised processing 
(like in the cotton industry) is necessary. 

2.2 Possible Uses of the Jatropha Plant 

ƒ

 

The Jatropha plant is used as a medicinal plant: 

o

 

The seeds against constipation; 

o

 

The sap for wound healing; 

o

 

The leaves as tea against malaria; etc. 

ƒ

 

Jatropha is planted in the form of hedges around gardens or fields to protect the crops 
against roaming animals like cattle or goats; 

ƒ

 

Jatropha hedges are planted to reduce erosion caused by water and/or wind; 

ƒ

 

Jatropha is planted to demarkate the boundaries of fields and homesteads; 

ƒ

 

Jatropha plants are used as a source of shade for coffee plants in Cuba; 

ƒ

 

In Comore islands, in Papua New Guinea and in Uganda Jatropha plants are used as a 
support plant for vanilla plants; 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

7

3. Jatropha promotion in selected countries 

3.0 Benin 

There is no knowledge about actual activities. But Benin, in former times Dahomey, exported 
in the years around 1940 lage quantities of Jatropha to France (Marseille), where the oil was 
used for the fabrication of the famous “Savon de Marseille”.  

In the years around 1990, the director of CADER Attakora in Natitingou, in the north of 
Beninn, started a campaign of the dissemination of Jatropha hedges in the north of Benin.  

3.1 Egypt 

(see more photos: 

http://www.jatropha.de/egypt/index.htm

In the desert near Luxor a 5.000 ha Jatropha plantation is 
installed in 2003 by D1, an English biodiesel company in 
collaboration with the Egyptian government. Irrigation with 
waste water. 

3.2 Ethiopia 

In the south of Ethiopia Jatropha is used in the form of 
hedges. In Addis Ababa a biodiesel company was founded 
which wants to exploit Jatropha in a large scale for biodiesel production. 

3.3 Ghana  

(see Annex 2) 

A private firm, Anuanom Industrial Project Ltd, is starting a large scale Jatropha project.  

The planning is for 250.000 hectares of Jatropha plantation. Up to now there are no real 
serious figures about the state of development available. A report mentions that 100 ha of 
Jatropha are alrerady planted to deliver seeds for the extension of the industrial plantations.  

The Jatropha oil will be used for the production of biodiesel. 

UNDP extends it project MFP (multi functional platforms) to Ghana. 

3.4 Guinea (Conakry) 

Guinea has a high density of Jatropha plant (mostly hedges, in the Fouta Jallon area), but 
there are no reports about activities/projects.  

UNDP extends it project MFP (multi functional platforms) to Ghana. 

3.5 Madagascar 

In the years around 1940, Madagascar was exporting 
Jatropha seeds to Marseille, France, as raw material for 
soap production (“Savon de Marseille”). There are still 
large quantities of Jatropha hedges, but their seeds are 
more or less not used. 

3.6 Mali 

GTZ-Projects (1987 – 1997) 

(see Jatropha website 

www.jatropha.org

)

 

 

Jatropha hedge in Madagascar

 

5.000 ha Jatropha plantation 

irrigated with waste water 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

8

Within the “Special Energy Programme” of GTZ Jatropha activities commenced in 1987 and 
continued in different organisational forms until 1997. The Malian partner of the GTZ project 
was DMA and CNESOLER.  

During the GTZ projects basic studies were carried out on the density of Jatropha hedges in 
different regions of the country, on the yield of the hedges, on the oil yield of the expellers 
and the ram presses, on the economy of soap 
production and the use of Jatropha oil as diesel 
substitute. Also studies were undertaken on the 
value of the Jatropha presscake as an organic 
fertiliser. 

At the end of the GTZ projects, in 1997, the 
population of Jatropha was estimated at around 
10.000 km of Jatropha hedges, which represents a 
potential of about 2.000 tons of Jatropha oil. 

UNIDO / UNDP 

UNDO/UND started a large scale project to disseminate “Multifunctional Energy Platforms 
(MFP)” in the rural areas of Mali. 450 units are planned, and 15 %, i. e. almost 70 units, 
should run with Jatropha oil as fuel. 

This programme will be extended to Senegal, Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana. 

Description of the platform 

(from website 

www.ptfm.net

)

 

Essentially, it comprises a 10 H.P diesel engine, capable of driving up to a dozen different 
ancillary modules. Among are a grain mill, a de-huller, a shea butter press and even an 
electric alternator. This alternator can drive modules such as a water pump, provide power for 
up to 250 light bulbs, charge batteries, drive a sawmill or weld metal. The platform employs 
simple and appropriate technology and is an economic, practical and sustainable solution for 
many of the problems faced by rural communities.  Local artisans are trained to master all 
aspects of this simple and appropriate technology. 

Mali Folkecenter 

Mali Folkecenter, a NGO in Bamako, took up the Jatropha activities in 2000, which were 
carried out by GTZ between 1987 and 1997. In the meantime CNESOLER was in charge of 
the Jatropha activities (CNESOLER was the national partner of the GTZ project). Mali 
Folkecenter gets financial support from the Siemenpuu Foundation in Finland. 

UNIFEM price 2003 

(German UNIFEM Section)

  

In 2003 the Jatropha project in Mali, started by GTZ and continued by Mali Folkecenter, 
received the 2

nd

 price of the German UNIFEM branch. 

3.7 Mozambique 

As a former Portuguise colony, in some areas there are large populations of Jatropha hedges. 
From Mozambique the knowledge of the Jatropha hedges invaded Zimbabwe, Malawi and 
Zambia. 

The South African Oil & Gas Company “Sasol Technology (Pty) Ltd” built a gas pipeline 
from South Mozambique to Johannesburg, South Africa. Along the pipeline they initiated 
activities of rural development. The project manager in charge of these community 
development activities explains the objective of these activities as follows: The objective is to 
do rural development to let the population participate in the economic benefits of the pipeline. 

old Jatropha hedge around a field

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

9

He intends to create small as well as large Jatropha plantations in the neighborhood of the 
pipeline. 

3.8 Namibia 

There are some initiatives to plant Jatropha in Namibia, mostly from white farmers. But the 
climate (rainfall is not sufficient) does not allow Jatropha plantation in a larger extent. 

3.9 Senegal 

A project carried out by ATI (now Enterprise Works), an 
American NGO, in the region of Tiès, planted Jatropha 
hedges and extracted Jatropha oil with ram presses. The oil 
was used to run Diesel engines (for flower mills) and to 
make soap. 

3.10 South Africa 

 

 

Emerald Oil Int. (Pty) Ltd

 is initiating a 100.000 tons per year biodiesel plant in Durban. 

It tries to organise the production of the feedstock for the plant (Jatropha curcas seeds) in 
South Africa or to import it from the neighboring countries (Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia) 
or from Madagascar. 

It

 supports the Agricultural Extension Service of KwaZulu-Natal to establish large scale 

plantations of Jatropha hedges. 

 

 

Owen Sithole College of Agriculture (OSCA) 

The college has a very small Jatropha test plantation 
(100 plants) in co-operation with the Agricultural 
Extension Service, KwaZulu-Natal.  

 

 

The

 Agricultural Extension Service, KwaZulu-Natal 

is very active in promoting the plantation of Jatropha in 
the Makatini flats just south of Swaziland at the coast of 
the Indian Ocean. For this it formed a Jatropha Task 
Team, which also organises public field days (see 
annex 14, page 48). 

3.11 Sudan  

(

http://www.jatropha.de/sudan/index.html

 

 

Jatropha is found in Sudan in many areas such as Khartoum State in Central Sudan, 
Kassala State in the East and Kordofan State in the West. However, it is dominant in the 
Southern States especially in Bahr El Jebel and Bahr El Gazal States. It is mentioned as an 
indigenous plant in some books describing the plants of 
Sudan. The farmers in the south plant them as hedges to 
protect their gardens and fields. 

 

 

Jatropha Research started in Sudan as early as 1972 with 
studies concerning the molluscicidal effect of the plant.  

 

 

A Jatropha Project exists in Kutum, North Darfur, with 
participationof the German Development Service. 

 

Soap from the ATI project 

Jatropha plant in Kutum, North 

Darfur, Sudan 

Small Jatropha test plantation at 

OSCA, KwaZulu-Natal 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

10

 

3.12 Tanzania  

(

http://www.jatropha.de/tanzania/index.html

KAKUTE Ltd,  

 This firm disseminates the know how concerning “The 
Jatropha System” and produces Jatropha soap in an 
industrial scale. The dissemination is done within a project 
called “ARI-Monduli” (Alternative Ressources of Income 
for Monduli women). This project is financed by the 
American McKnight Foundation and is executed in close 
co-operation with Heifer International Foundation. 

KAKUTE produces around 
1.000 kg of soap a year and 
sells it in form of pieces of 30 and 90 g each. Their revenues from 
the sale of soap is about 6 million TZS (about 6.000 USD). 

KAKUTE created a test plantation on private ground (2,5 ha) to 
get experience with Jatropha 
plantations. 

KAKUTE tries to use Jatropha 
against erosion: Between 
Arusha and Lake Manyara is a 
very big plain (Massai steppe). 
A water line for cattle was 
installed there and now Massai 

cattle herds from far away come to get water. This led to an 
overgrazing around the water basin and consequently to 
deep erosion grooves. KAKUTE tries to plant Jatropha 
against the erosion, but with little success, since the origin of 
the overgrazing, the water source, still exists. 

The project ARI-Monduli disseminates the Jatropha know how in different ways: 

 

 

Nurseries 

A women group of 12 members about 20 km from 
Arusha started to integrate Jatropha in their tree 
nurseries. They sell each seedling for about 50 TSh to 
individuals and schools, which plant them around their 
compounds. 

Jatropha soap produced by 

KAKUTE 

 

Test plot of KAKUTE with 

Jatropha cuttings

 

 

Erosion in the Massai plains 

 

Members of Women group 

producing Jatropha seedlings

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

11

 

 

 

Plantation in Teachers Training School, 

In a teachers training school a 2 ha area was planted 
with Jatropha seedlings (more than 2.000) in the 
beginning of 2002. In mid 2003 the first seeds could 
be collected.  
 
This plantation was also used as a site to inform the 
population about the advantages of “the Jatropha 
System” by organisinfg a public field day. 

 

 

Soap making women group in Mto Wa Mbu 

A women group in Mto Wa Mbu buys Jatropha oil from Engaruka and makes soap from 
it. They sell this Jatropha soap for a very good price.  

 

 

Seed collecting, oil extracting and soap making women groups in Engaruka 

There are 2 women groups in Engaruka who collect Jatropha seeds and extract the oil. 
Part of the oil is sold to the Jatropha soap women group in Mto Wa Mbu, the other part 
they process themselfes to soap. KAKUTE started this activities about two years ago 
within the ARI-Monduli project. 

Mto Wa Mbu 

A women group in Mto Wa Mbu, a town just besides the Manyara lake on the way to the 
Ngorongoro Crater, buys every month 20 litres of Jatropha oil from the first women group of 

Engaruka for 2.000 TZS per litre (2 USD). 
 
From this oil they produce about 40 kg of soap and sell 
this for about 126.000 TZS (120 USD), a piece of about 
100 g for 500 TZS. Since soap making is an easy 
process and does not 
require much labour, 

this is economically a very interesting business (details 
see page 21). 

 

The Jatropha soap has the immage of a medical soap. It is 
produced by the women group within a dispensary and is 
sold by women in other dispensaries. Many different 
medicinal properties are attributed to the Jatropha soap (it 
helps against different skin diseases). This is why the 
soap can be sold for such a good price. 

 
 
 

 

Simple method to produce soap bars

 

 

Sale of Jatropha soap in a dispensary

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

12

 

Jatropha hedge besides the market place in 

Engaruka 

Engaruka 

The village of Engaruka, just at the borderline of 
Ngorongoro Conservation area, has a high density of 
Jatropha hedges. Almost all gardens within the village 
are surrounded/protected by Jatropha hedges. The origin 
of the plants is not known, but they are there since 
people remember. One saying goes that the Germans 
introduced it during their colonial time before 1918. The 
village is divided into two sections. Each has a women 
group of about 30 women, all married and almost all 
Massai. Since two years they collect Jatropha seeds.  
First they only collected seeds and sold the seeds to 
KAKUTE for about 150 TZS per kg. Now they extract 
oil with a ram press and get 2.000 TZS per litre. This is 
about 1.250 TZS more and needs about 1 hour of labour 

(yield of the rampress is about 1 litre per hour). 
 
The women told us, that befor they went to 
collect wood to sell it to have some money. 
Now they don’t have to collect firewood for 
sale anymore. And soon they intent to stop 
selling the oil and make soap and sell the soap, 
what they are already doing to a certain extend. 
 
KAKUTE is in charge of this project. To 
assure that the Jatropha activities stay in the 
hands of the women, Kakute refuses to buy 
seeds from men. So if men want to get money 
by collecting Jatroph seeds, they have to sell 
them first to the women. 
 
 
 
 

Vyahumu Trust 

The VYAUMU TRUST is a project of ELCT (Evangelical Lutheren 
Church of Tanzania) to improve the income of Tanzanian farmers by 
enabling them to produce sunflower oil and to sell it directly. This 
improves their income from sunflower farming by 100 to 200 % 

The Vyahumu Trust produces the oil expeller, a key element for the 
production of Jatropha oil, which was developed by order of GTZ to be 
produced and used in Nepal with the name”Sundhara” expeller. In 
Tanzania this expeller is named “Sayary” 
expeller. The VYAHUMU TRUST assures also 
the pre sale and after sale service. 

 

3.13 Uganda 

 

Jatropha hedge planted by the autochtone 

population 

Sayari-expeller for sunflower seed 

oil extraction in Mlali, Tanzania 

 

Sale of Jatropha soap in a shop in Engaruka

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

13

 

 

Mr. Matthias Goergen, a consultant for GTZ, reported about Jatropha hedges planted by 
the autochtone population in Uganda (West Nile Province). But they are planted as well 
by the refugees in the camps, who do subsistence agriculture on small plots (0,3 to 0,5 ha 
per person). It seems that the population does not use the Jatropha fruits. The hedges are 
used only for fencing. 

 

 

Mr. Alex Baudet founded a biodiesel company in Uganda (Uganda Biofuels Ltd. in 

JONAM COUNTY in NEBBI district

).  

 

 

In Uganda, Jatropha trees are used as a support for the vanilla. 

3.14 Zambia 

In Zambia, mainly in the areas near the border to Mozambique, large quantities of Jatrpha 
hedges exist. But generally the population neglects the use of the seeds. The hedges serve as a 
protection device against cattle. 

In Lusaka a 2 ha test plantation exists, which was 
planted by the NCSR (Nations Council of 
Scientific Research), by contract with a soap 
production firm. The intention was to replace 
imported tallow by Jatropha oil. After the soap 
firm was sold, the management lost interest in the 
Jatropha approach. 

In Southern Province, besides the Lake Kariba, 
Jatropha plants are well known to the population, 
because workers, who returned from Zimbabwe, 
brought seeds back home and planted them.  

In 1999 an excursion trip with about 20 farmers 
from Southern Province to the BUN Jatropha 
project in Zimbabwe initiated a lot of enthusiasme 
within the group of farmers. Almost all of them 
started small Jatropha plantations or hedges. A 
study from Malawi two years later mentioned 100 
farmers who started to plant Jatropha. 

3.15 Zimbabwe 

Bun Project 

(

http://www.jatropha.de/zimbabwe/bun.htm

)

 

The Jatropha project of BUN started 1996. It is funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, the 
Australien Agency for International Development (AusAid) and the Royal Netherlands 
Embassy.  

The project is located in Makosa, near the Mozambiquan border. Jatropha plants are in 
abundance there. Traditionally they are used as a live fence around homesteads and gardens. 

The objectives of the project are: 

 

 

Use of the plant as a source of oil for use as fuel (domestic and industrial use) and 
for soap making; 

 

 

Use of the press cake as organic fertilizer; 

 

 

Use of the oil for lighting purposes; 

 

Jatropha hedge around a homestead near 

Choma 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

14

 

Binga Trees Project 

(

http://www.jatropha.de/zimbabwe/binga.htm

)

 

The Binga Trees Programme started off August 1996 with the aim to develop local resources 
that appeared to be untapped in spite of their capacity to improve the living conditions of 
Binga District's rural population of 105.000. 

 

Important among the perceived under-utilised resources are a number of food and/or oilseed 
producing trees such as the Moringa oleifera, the Jatropha curcas, the Cashew nut, and the 
Trichilia emetica, which all have an obvious potential to improve the household food security 
in a variety of ways 

 

Environment of Africa 

(

http://www.jatropha.de/zimbabwe/ea/ea-jcl-activities.htm

)

 

One community group of five members representing 
both men and women has started up planting Jatropha 
curcas in the urban areas of Chinotimba, Victoria Falls. 
The group use both seedlings and cuttings of Jatropha. 
The seedling are raised in own nurseries and the 
cuttings are collected from existing fencing material in 
the neighbourhood. Jatropha is mainly planted on 
marginalized soil i.e. unused public areas and school 
areas for fencing. The group involves the children and 
the teachers from local schools in the planting project 
and use the project as a teaching lesson for the children 
to raise awareness of the environment and to take ownership of the trees. The management 
and care of the plants is organized between the user group and administration of the school. 

 

 

Planting of hedges in urban areas 

 

 

Distribution of seeds to rural areas 

 

 

Planting Jatropha in plantation 

 

POPA (Plant Oil Producers Association) 

POPA was founded in 1992 by Zimbabwean commercial farmers who wanted to produce 
Jatropha oil in a large scale. Soon they discovered that the profit margin concerning Jatropha 
oil as fuel was not so big as they expected, especially because there was no possibility of 
mechanical harvesting of the Jatropha seeds. The activities of POPA slowed down. 

 

4. Impacts of the promotion of the use of Jatropha 

4.1 Social impacts 

Gender issues

 (who does the work, who gets the money, changes of the distribution of the 

workload, changes of the social status) 

 

 

In 

Mali

 the Jatropha hedges belong to the men, who are the owner of the land. The 

women can collect the seeds to make soap at a subsistence level. As soon as the 

 

JCL-nursery near Victoria Falls 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

15

women want to make money by selling soap, the men open their hands and ask for 
money, because they are the owners of the Jatropha hedges.  

Because of this situation, the women didn’t want  to give their earned money to the 
men. They only produced the soap in small quantities for the own family, but they did 
not use the potential of seeds on the hedges of the family. 

It seems that since the years of 1997, the situation improved in favour of the women, 
because the men (village chief) gave them plots to grow Jatropha. 

 

 

In 

Tanzania

, the situation is different. As in Mali, the land is owned by the men. But 

the women have the right to collect the seeds from the family hedges, and to process 
or sell them. The money is for them. Also the village gave them plots where they can 
plant Jatropha for their own profit. 

 

 

In 

Zambia 

the author was told, that the situation is like in Tanzania, described above. 

 

 

About the situation in

 Zimbabwe

, there are no information.

 

 

People without own farm land

 (accessibility of seed, Jatropha in public forests for free 

collection) 

 

 

In the projects and regions visited, there were no “wild” Jatropha trees. All Jatropha 
trees were planted as protection hedges, i. e. there was always an ownership of a 
family. And only members of the family were allowed to collect seeds. 

 

Other social issues, like cultural/religious traditions

 (in some countries women are not 

allowed to own trees or farm land), or indigenous knowledge 

 

 

In 

Mali

 as well as in 

Tanzania

, women are not allowed to own farm land and trees. 

But in both cases the responsibles for the distribution of the land gave some plots to 
women groupss to grow Jatropha there. 

In 

Mali

, in 1997, this donation of a plot to the women group was renounced twice  

after the women planted more than 1.000 seedlings. The women lost interest to try it a 
third time. 

Mali Folkecenter reported, that recently the situation changed and land was given to 
women groups to grow Jatropha. This information has to be varified. 

 

 

Concerning indigenous knowledge the soap making with oil from different oil fruits is 
well known in Mali and has an old tradition. They often used Shea butter and ground 
nut oil for soap making. Coustic soda, the only product which has to come from 
outside the village, is well available on all the rural markets, even far from the big 
cities. In this way, soap production with Jatropha oil improves the the food situation, 
since no edible oils have to be used for soap making. 

In 

Zambia

 the soap making technology is not known in the rural areas.  

The situation in 

Zimbabwe

 and 

Tanzania

 concerning traditinal rural soap making is 

not known. 

Working places:

 The large scale Jatropha plantation in Egypt needs to employ a big number 

of workers to maintain the irrigation system, to harvest the seeds and to maintain the 
plantation itself. The 5.000 ha plantation will need about 3,3 million working hours to collect 
the seeds, which are about 15.000 working months or about 1.500 full time workers, as long 
as no mechanical device to collect the seeds is invented. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

16

 

4.2 Ecological impacts 

 

 

on 

Biodiversity

 (is Jatropha competing with other crops?) and on the genetic diversity of 

the Jatropha species 

o

 

Jatropha is not a weed. It does not propagate by itself, it has to be planted. The 
author did not see any self propagation of tees even after some 30 years.  

When the hedges are not maintained, more and more plants die (due to termites ?), 
and the old hedge can only be guessed. 

o

 

There are only three varieties of Jatropha known so far. And no selection process 
to get high yield varieties has been done so far. These 3 varieties are: 

ƒ

 

Cape Verde variety

. These are small seeds (weight of 1.000 grains 

is about 682 g, length of seed is about 16,8 mm). This variety is 
found almost in all countries onf the world, except Central America. 

ƒ

 

Nicaragua variety

. This variety is different from the Cape Verde 

variety by larger leafes, which have a more rounded form, and by 
larger seeds (weight of 1.000 grains is about 878 g, length of seed is 
about 20,3 mm). The yield of the trees seems to be the same, 
because there are less fruits on a tree than with the Cape Verde 
variety. 

ƒ

 

Non toxic Mexican variety

. (weight of 1.000 grains is between 524 

g and 901 g). Birgit Schmook reports, that the seeds in the zone 
around Misantla, Veracruz, are very appreciated by the population 
as food. 

 

 

 

Erosion and the desertification process 

o

 

The Massai plain near Arusha is very 
much endangered by erosion due to 
overgrazing (see picture at right, the 
reason is the installation of a permanent 
water basin, which attracts cattle from a 
large area). Kakute plants Jatropha trees, 
which are not browsed by the animals, to 
protect the soil. 

o

 

The Massai women in Engaruka, 
Tanzania, report, that they were cutting 
trees and selling wood along the road to 
get some income. Due to the revenues gained by the use of the Jatropha plant, they 
don’t do this anymore, which protects the still existing trees. Their income is 
higher with Jatropha. They received two plots from the village to install Jatropha 
plantations. 

 
 

 

 

Rehabilitation of degraded land 

Erosion in the Massai plain near Arusha, 

T

i

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

17

o

 

Since Jatropha has a deep reaching tap root, it is able to “pump” minerals from the 
depth of the soil to the surface. This leads to a rehabilitation of degraded land (see 
also decision of Tamil Nadu State on waste land rehabilitation in annex 9. 

 

 

 

Other environmental aspects of Jatropha promotion 

The NGO Environnement Africa uses the plantation of Jatropha to raise awareness with 
school children and teachers for environmental aspects: “The group involves the children 
and the teachers from local schools in the planting project and use the project as a 
teaching lesson for the children to

 raise awareness

 of the environment and to take 

ownership of the trees”. 

Jatropha plantations can play an important role in 

carbon sequestration

. The existing 

large scale project in Egypt and the planned large scale Jatropha projects in South Africa 
and Ghana are calculated with an initial financement by the Trade of Emission Certificates 
(see annex 10).  

 

4.3 Economic impacts 

Egypt 

The 5.000 ha Jatropha plantation near Luxor is initiated by a British biodiesel firm, D1. An 
important financial aspect is the money, which the project will receive from the trade of 
emission certificates of CO

2

 sequestration. Since no data have been made available by the 

project, here is an estimation of the money the project can apply for: 

1 ha has about 1.600 plant, each has after 7 years about 200 kg of biomass, including roots. 
Dry matter content about 25 %. This gives a biomass of 80 tons dry matter per ha.  

About half that weight is carbondioxid, i.e. 40 tons. The trade of emission certificates pays 
between 3 and 4 USD per ton of CO

2

 sequestration, which is about 150 USD per ha.  

The 5.000 ha plantation can consequently calculate with financial aid of 750.000 USD due to  
carbon sequestration 
 

Mali 

 

 

External evaluation of the Jatropha project  

In 1995 a GTZ-expert in economy analysed the economic feasibility of the Jatropha 
approach. He studied 2 versions of oil expelling: a hand operated ram press and a motor 
driven Sundhara expeller. For the last he calculated 2 different engines: a cheap Indian 
motor (Lister) with regularly breakdowns and a more solid German Hatz motor. The 
summary and conclusions are added in 

annex 6

Ram-press: 

Mr. Wiemer states: The calculations for the hand operated Bielenberg press 

indicate that the extraction of Jatropha oil with this equipment is not financially feasible 
under field conditions in rural Mali. 

Motor driven expeller: 

Mr. Wiemer states: The results of the financial analysis indicate 

that for the Lister version an internal rate of return on investment (IRR) of 49 % can be 
projected. For the Hatz version, the profitability of the oil mill is lower (26 % IRR) due to 
the more expensive equipment, but also carries a much lower risk of mechanical 
breakdowns.

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

18

 

 

 

Soap production (calculation of the project) 

As can be seen in the table further down, The extraction of 12 kg of seeds gives 3 l of oil, 
which are transformed into soap. The soap making technology is very simple and therefor 
a real village technology: the only investment is a hand operated handpress for 150 USD. 
The soap will be made in plastc bowls or buckets, and the pieces are cut with ordinary 
knifes.  

As the table shows, the processing of 12 kg of seeds gives 28 pieces of soap of 170 g each, 
which is 4,760 kg. This takes 5 hours of work (estimated). The total input is added to 3,04 
USD. 

The soap can be sold for 4,20 USD, and the 9 kg of presscake are well appreciated as 
organic fertilizer. It can be sold for 0,27 USD, which gives an total of revenues of 4,47 
USD.  

Reduced by the input of 3,04 USD, the net profit of processing 12 kg of Jatropha seeds is 
1,43 USD, which is about 0,3 USD per hour.  

Even if the estimated time for processing is doubled, the net profit is about 0,15 USD per 
hour. This is more than the average wage for workers. 

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

19

 

 

 

Poverty reduction 

In the pilot zones in Mali the average length of hedges was found to be 15.000 m. Each 
meter of hedge produces 0,8 kg of seeds, i. e. that 12 tons of seed can be collected in the 
average village. 

 

The above table shows which added value can be obtained by processing these seeds. 

If only seeds are processed and the oil and the by-products presscake and sediment are 
sold, a total sum of about 1.800 USD will stay in the village. 

If the oil is processed by an entrepreneur to soap and the soap is sold, then the total of 
about 3.6oo USD will stay in the village (lower part of the above table). 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

20

Sudan 

 
Economic evaluation of the utilization of Jatropha seeds for soap making  
(from Henning, mission report, Sudan, 2001) 
 
This economic evaluation adds the costs of material and labour input for a soap production of 
3 litres of oil, which gives 5 kg of soap, reduced by the value of the sold press cake. 

 

 

harvesting of 12 kg of seeds  

4 h work 

 

 

Caustic soda, 0,5 kg  

1,0 US$ 

 

 

Oil extraction (12 kg seeds, 3 l oil) 

4 hours work 

 

 

Soap making (5 kg soap) 1 hour work 

 

 

Depreciation of oil press  0,24 US$ 

 

 

Sale of press cake 0,27 US$ 

 

 

Result:

  

5 kg of soap = 50 pieces of 100 g, one piece is worth 0,43 US$ (100 Sudan Dirham SD) 
50 x 0,43 = 21,5 US$ 
minus caustic soda and depreciation, plus sale of press cake = 0,97 US$ 

economic result: 20,53 US$ for 1 production. 

The minimum to live in Khartoum is 170 US$ (Information by the German Embassy). To 
earn this money, 8,3 production cycles have to be made, i. e. 8,3 x 3 =  24,9 l of oil have 
to be processed, which will take 8,3 x 9 = 74,7 hours of work. This is a work load of less 
than two weeks. 

i.e. with harvest of Jatropha seeds, oil extraction, soap making and sale a worker can 
earn a monthly salary with about 75 hours work!  

 

 

Tanzania 

 

The follwing economic evaluation of activities of the use of the Jatropha plant is based on 
experience of KAKUTE in its Jatropha project ARI-Monduli (Alternative Resources of 
Income for Monduli women). The figures are ascertained by Kakute. 

The economic calculation is differentiated between seed collection, oil extraction and soap 
making. It is obvious, that the collection of seeds and its sale gives the least added value. Oil 
extraction is more profitable than seed collection, but not as good as soap making. This 
explains very clearly that the Massai women of Engaruka are not very much interested to sell 
seeds or oil, they want to gain the added value of the whole production chain and sell only 
soap. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

21

 

Collection and sale of seeds 

Collection of seeds: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

  Collection of seeds: 2 kg in 1 hour 

 

 

 

  Sale of seeds: 150 TZS per kg 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

  Value added for 1 hour work 

300 TZS 

0,29 USD per hour 

 

Extraction and sale of oil 

Oil extraction: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

 5 kg of seed for 1 litre of oil is 1,7 hours of work 

 

 

 1,0 hours of work to extract 1 litre of oil 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 Input:  

5 kg of seed 

750 TZS 

0,71 USD per litre 

  

1,5 hours of work to extract 1 litre of oil   

 

  

depreciation of ram press 0,02 USD / kg  

 

  

for 5 kg: 

105 TZS 

0,10 USD per litre 

 Output: 

Sale of 1 litre of oil 

2.000 TZS 

1,90 USD  

  

 

 

 

 

 Value added for 1 hour of work 

 

1.145 TZS 

1,09 USD per hour 

  

 

 

 

 

 

Production and sale of soap 

Soap making: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

  16 hours work for 252 bars of soap 

 

 

 

  1 bar sold for 500 TZS 

   

 

 

  Purchase of 20 litres of oil à 2.000 TZS = 40.000 

 

 

  Purchase of 3 kg of Caustic Soda à 2.000 TZS = 6.000 TZS 

 

  Plasic for wrapping soap = 3.000 TZS 

 

 

 

  10 hours for miscelenous work (organising purchase of oil, wrapping the soap, etc) 
   

 

   

 

 

  Input:  

20 l oil 

 

40.000 TZS

38,10 USD  

   

Plastic 

 

3.000 TZS

2,86 USD  

   

Caustic Soda 

6.000 TZS

5,71 USD  

   

Total input for 26 hours work

49.000 TZS

46,67 USD  

  Output: 

252 bars à 500 TZS 

126.000 TZS 120,00 USD  

  Total of revenues 

 

77.000 TZS

73,33 USD  

   

 

   

 

 

  Value added for 1 hour of work 

2.962 TZS

2,82 USD per hour 

 

Zambia 

 

 

 

Jatropha oil as diesel substitute 

(for details see annex 7)

 

In a feasibility study in 1998, the author stated, that Jatropha oil can be produced for less 
than 3.000 ZMK (1000 ZMK = 0,41 USD). But this is a prohibitive price for the use of 
the oil as diesel substitute. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

22

 

 

 

Jatropha oil for soap making 

(for details see annex 7) 

The economy of soap making depends very much on the price for Jatropha seeds. If the 
price is fixed to 500 ZMK (which is 0,21 USD or duble the price of seeds in Mali), a piece 
of soap is calculated to 248 ZMK, about half the price of cheap industrial soap. Women of 
a women group in Mazabuka confirmed, that the Jatropha soap can be sold for about 
1.000 ZMK a piece, i. e. 4 times the production price). 

If the price for seeds is raised to 1.000 ZMK (4 times the price for seeds in Mali), the price 
for soap raises only to about 373 ZMK, which is still less than the cheapest industrial soap 
and about a third of the price, the women group of Mazabuka suggests. 

If the calculation is done only by using the working hours for seed collection and oil 
extraction, plus material, the profit for 1 hour of work is calculated to be more than 1.000 
ZMK (1.007 ZMK), that is more than duble the wage as payed for rural labour (400 
ZMK).  

 

Answers to distinct questions of the Terms of Reference: 

The best documentated data concerning the economy of the use of the Jatropha tree were 
found in Tanzania, in the ARI-Monduli project of KAKUTE. The further down given answers 
refer to KAKUTE, if not otherwise indicated. 

 

 

Household income 

(sale of seeds, production and sale of oil, production and sale of soap)

 

There are no data available concerning the financial effect of the profit of Jatropha 
processing to the single households of the members of the women groups. 

 

 

 

Household food security 

(Jatropha is grown in form of hedges to protect food crops)

 

There are no data available concerning the amount of food saved by Jatropha hrges. In 
Mali it was told by the CMDT (Malian Cotton Producing Society), that about 10 % of the 
crops are eaten by roaming cattle. This might be an approximative value concerning the 
protection of food crops by Jatropha hedges. Probably the real value is higher, because 
food crops are grown in gardens within or near the village, where the density of roaming 
animals is higher. 

 

 

 

Farming systems 

(integration of Jatropha into the farming calender, Jatropha as 

integrated part of the farm design)

  

Before the beginning of the Jatropha project of GTZ in Mali a socio-economic study on 
the feasibilty of the Jatropha approach was done (Keita). This study stated, that no major 
conflict concerning the collection of Jatropha seeds and the agricultural works is visible 
(see annex 12). 

No documentation concerning farm design has been found in the countries the author has 
visited. There is a document in Portuguese language from Quental Mendes, 1992, where 
small farming units are proposed with Jatropha hedges as an integral part of them, mainly 
for the boundaries between the fields and the farms (see annex 11). 

 

 

 

The income situation in rural areas 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

23

No general remarks about the income situation in rural areas can be made. But a 
description of the economy of soap production in different countries (see above) shows, 
that this production as part of an integrated approach is economically very interesting.  

In Tanzania, the profit of 1 hour’s work of soap making is more than 2 USD, which is a 
phantatic profit marge, if the income of a technical person of a flower mill in the rural area 
is only 10 USD a month. 

 

 

 

Availability of renewable energy in the rural areas 

(household energy, fuel)

 

No general statement about the availability of renewable energy in rural areas can be 
made.  

Wood as a renewable household energy for cooking is very scarce in the Massai region of 
Tanzania. The interest to use Jatropha oil instead is very high. KAKUTE developed a 
cooker for Jatropha oil, but the development is not yet completed.  

In the Massai area between Lake Victoria and Iringa, a high density of Jatropha hedges 
are reported. In this region the potential of plant oil as a renewable energy source for 
cooking and lighting might be suffient to supply the household needs. A detailed study 
has to varify this statement. 

In Mali, in the regions of Jatropha use, the average village has a potential of 12 tons of 
seed, which is 2.400 litres of oil. This quantity of a renewable fuel is at least far enough to 
supply the village need for lighting and for flower milling, as well as for the electricity 
production for lighting of the dispensary and the scool. It will be probably not enough for 
the energetic needs for cooking for the whole village.  

But some of the villages have up to 40 km of Jatropha hedges, which represents a quantity 
of 6.400 litres of oil. This will probably cover all actual energy needs of the village. 

Bosch-Siemens, a big German firm for household machines (washing machines, 
refrigerators, stiirers etc) is developing a plant oil cooker, which will be tested in the 
second half of 2004 in the Phillipines. This cooker works perfectly with plant oil and 
should be sold for less than 30 USD, the head of the project stated. 

 

 

 

Creation of small business units 

(milling services, oil extraction services, entrepreneurs 

who buy seed and sell oil or products, soap making, etc.)

 

In Tanzania the ELCT is running a project, VYAHUMU TRUST, to produce edible oil 
from sunflower seeds to increase the income of the sunflower farmers (the oil is sold three 
times the price of the sunflower seeds). The extraction of the oil is organised as a service 
provided by small entrepreneuers who own a Sayari oil expeller (see photo page 14, 
Vyahumu Trust). 

SUDERETA, a NGO of ELCT, supported by BftW, is going to run a project on solar 
lamps with a pure commercial approach. A book, Enterprise od Trust, describes this 
approach (see attachment 13). 

The women group of Engaruka can be regarded as a firm (30 members), which collects 
seed for sale, but started to process also the other steps of the production chain, oil 
extraction and soap making. In this way the whole added value stays within the village 
(see page 12). 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

24

The women group of Mto Wa Mbu, described on page 11, forms such an economic unity, 
which buys oil and the other inputs, produces soap and sells it. Their organisational form 
is that of a women group, not a firm. But it could be regarded easily as a “Enterprise of 
Trust”. 

SUDERETA is very much interested to start a pilot project for the the utilisation of the 
Jatropha plant . 

 

 

 

Local, regional, international markets

 (availability of energy in the rural area changes 

the pattern of production, i. e. more edible oils may be produced, which improve the local 
diet and replace imported edible oils) 

Up to now the Jatropha activies are locally based and have no effect to other regions. With 
the large plantation in Egypt (which will go into full production in 2007) this will change. 
Then oil may be traded as it is done now with edible oils.  

South Africa tries to import seeds or oil in large quantities as raw material for the start of a 
biodiesel production, until the own plantations will be able to produce. 

Until now South Africa imported 5 tons of seed from Zimbabwe, and has a contract of 60 
tons from Zambia. 

To start the Jatropha plantation in Egypt, the project had to import about 15 tons of seed. 
The seeds came from India. 

A German firm imported 500 l of Jatropha oil from Tanzania for engine tests. 

Besides of the above mentioned activities the author doesn’t have any information about 
substantial trade of Jatropha seeds, oil or soap outside local markets.  

 

5. Critical assessment of the Jatropha System, based on findings 

In the various African countries the utilization of this plant is spreading. In all the countries 
mentioned in this report, the plant is already there and the farmers use it mainly as live fences 
around homesteads, gardens and fields. Also the seeds are used in some countries in West 
Africa by women to produce soap in a traditional way. 

Only since a few years many GOs and NGOs and private companies show interest in the 
possibilities which the use of this plant can offer. 2 main aspects are predominant in the use of 
the plant: 

1)

 

NGOs working in rural areas are interested in the income generating possibilities by 
the utilization of the Jatropha plant, maily for oil for soap making.  

2)

 

Some government organisations and private companies are interested in the energetic 
aspect by using Jatropha oil for the large scale production of biodiesel. The carbon 
sequestration effect of Jatropha plantations seems to play an important role in the 
financement of these large projects. 

Economic evaluation of these 2 ways of using Jatropha oil: 

Soap production: 

The economy of soap production is positiv in all the cases were data were available.  

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

25

In the case of Tanzania, were the most and the most recently collected data were available, the 
economy of soap production shows impressing profit. The profit changes within the different 
steps of the processing chain. 

 

 

The first step, the collection of seeds, shows the lowest income for 1 hour of work, 
only 0,29 USD per hour. 

 

 

The second step, oil extraction by the hand operated ram press, shows an income 
of 0,73 USD per hour, i. e. almost 3-fold the income of seed collection. 

 

 

The third step, the production of soap from the Jatropha oil, shows the highest 
profit, 2,82 USD per hour. 

This third point explains, why the firm KAKUTE in Arusha, Tanzania, can exist by producing 
and selling Jatropha soap. Due to its Jatropha promotion activities they are able to buy cheap 
seeds in areas with high Jatropha potential. The women, who sold the seeds, are aware of the 
situation and decided, not to sell seeds anymore, but to process them, to oil and soap and sell 
that.  

Jatropha oil as fuel: 

Jatropha oil in Tanzania (Arusha, Engaruka, Mto Wa Mbu) is traded in small quantities for 2 
USD per litre. This is 3-times the price of Diesel fuel at the filling station. 

This means, it is economically not interesting to use Jatropha oil as diesel substitute. If 
somebody has Jatropha oil, he sells it to soap makers or produces soap himself, and buys 
diesel with the profit. 

This is the reason, why KAKUTE offers lamps and cookers for the use of Jatropha oil, but 
this seems to be an alibi, and there is not much interest by the population. Petrol for lighting 
and cooking is cheaper, if it is available. 

Jatropha plantations: 

It is not clear, why goverments (Egypt) and private firms (D1) are so much interested in 
producing biodiesel with Jatropha oil. The autor has not yet seen any economic calculation, 
which shows, that the biodiesel from Jatropha oil might be cheaper than the diesel fuel.  

It seems, that these organisations prepare for a sharp increase of fossil fuel prices, and want to 
get the technology ready to produce renewable fuel. With higher fuel pricec, this seems 
economically viable. 

The money received by selling Certified Emission Reductions is just a financial help to start 
such large. Jatropha plantations. 

Gender Aspects: 

 

 

Mali: 

Soap production with Jatropha oil, in Mali as well  as in Tanzania, seems to be a very 
priftzable activity. But in Mali there has not been a growth of this activity as expected. 
The seeds on the trees were not collected. The women used the technology (oil extraction 
and soap making), but only to a very limited extend. The reason seems to be the 
following: 

The men own the land and therefor also the Jastropha hedges. The women collect the 
seeds and make soap. Traditionally this soap was just for the use in the family. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

26

With the new technology (oil extraction), the women can produce a really good soap and 
sell it for a high price. They can “really” earn money. The men asked for part of the 
money, because the hedges are theirs. The women refused, so the men refused to give the 
women the right to collect the seeds from the hedges.  

Now the women use the new technology only in a very small extend, just to produce the 
soap for the family. The possible economic impact has to wait until the socio-economic 
conditions allow the women to use the Jatropha seeds to full extend and keep the money 
for themselves. 

 

 

Tanzania: 

In Tanzania, the men are as in Mali the owners of the land and of the Jatropha hedges. 
And the women collect the seeds, extract the oil and make soap. But in Tanzania the 
women can keep the money for them. The men don’t interfere. This is the reason why in 
Tanzania the utilization of Jatropha had much more impact in a short time (2 years) than 
in Mali (10 years). 

As a conclusion, one can say, that there are no hints, that the following central hypothesis is 
wrong: 

 

 

The Jatropha System creates a positive reciprocity between raw material/energy 

production and environment/food production. 

 

i. e. the more seeds/oil Jatropha hedges produce, the more food crops are protected from animals and erosion.  

Also additional income is created, mainly for women. 

 

It may still take some time, until the Jatropha System will contribut economically to the rural 
development in a large scale. But it seems, that the activities of many different organisations 
more and more suppport the Jatropha approach. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

27

 

6. Bibliography 

ƒ

 

Becker et al, Studies on Propagation of non-toxic variety of Jatropha curcas, Stuttgart, 
Germany, 1999; 

ƒ

 

Breitenstein/Shila, Enterprise of Trust – economic welfare in rural areas through the use 
of renewable energies, 2002 

ƒ

 

Gübitz et al, Biofuels and Industrial Products from 

Jatropha curcas

, developed from the 

Symposium “Jatropha 97”, Managua, Nicaragua, Febr. 1997 

 

 

Heller, Joachim, Physic Nut – Jatropha curcas L.; IPGRI - International Plant Genetic 
Resources Institute,1996; 

 

 

Henning, Reinhard K., The Jatropha System in Zambia – Evaluation of the existing 
Jatropha activities and proposals for an implementation strategy in Southern Province of 
Zambia, 1999 (non published feasibility study); 

 

 

Henning, Reinhard K., The Jatropha website 

http://www.jatropha.org

, 1997 – 2004; 

 

 

Henning, Reinhard K., Combating Desertification by integrated Utilization of the Jatropha 
plant – Experiences of the Jatropha Project in Mali, West Africa, 1997; 

 

 

Henning, Reinhard K., Jatropha Development Project to the Sudan – Report of a Mission 
to UNIDO, Khartoum, 2001, unpublished; 

 

 

Keita, Anne, Production et Utilisation de l’Huile de Pourghère comme Carburant au Mali 
– Aspects Socio-Economiques, Bamako, 1992 

 

 

Quental Mendes, Ministerio da Agricultura, Direc

 

ã

o de Economia Agr

á

ria, Para uma 

Agricoltura Camponesa de Aldeia, Maputo 1992 

 

 

Schmook, Birgit, Jatropha curcas L. Gensammlung Halbinsel Yucatan und 
Veracruz/Mexico, 1996 

 

 

Wegmershaus, R. Oliver, G.; Jatropha curcas in Zimbabwe, Growers Handbook; Plant Oil 
& Engine Development Group Ptv. Ltd., Harare, 1993 (non published copy); 

 

 

Wiemer, Hans-Jürgen, Financial and Economic Analysis of the Jatropha System, Report 
for GTZ, 1996; 

 

7. Attachments: 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

28

Annex 1 - ToR of Jatropha Case Study 

 

Case Study „Jatropha curcas L.”  

 

Assessment of the impact of the dissemination of “the Jatropha System” on the ecology of the 
rural area and the social and economic situation of the rural population (target group)  in 
selected countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. 

 

Objectives of the case study: 

 
As indicated in the study of Dr. Heller in the IPGRI-publication “Physic nut – Jatropha curcas 
L. Promoting the conservation and use of underutilized and neglected crops”, Jatropha curcas 
has the potential of an important role in integrated rural development.  
 
7 years after the publication of that study it would be important to see in practice, if the 
development potential of that crop can be directed into rural development, or if there are 
serious unforeseen difficulties (side effects), which oppose to the dissemination of this 
approach for sustainable rural development. 
 
Worldwide there are many NGOs and national and international organizations, which adopted 
the Jatropha System to integrate it into their activities. The experiences of these organisations 
should be evaluated to compare the real development impacts with the predicted ones. 
 
This case study should evaluate the impact of the production and use of Jatropha oil on the 
ecological situation of the rural area and the social and economic situation of the rural 
population. 
 

Study outline: 
 

1. Description of the plant, distribution, ecology, uses 
 
2.  Description of the Jatropha-System 
 
3. Jatropha promotion in selected countries 
 

Africa: Mali, Sudan, Cape Verde, Southafrica, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania 
Asia: India 
Latinamerica: Nicaragua,  

 
4. Impacts of the promotion of the use of Jatropha 
 
4.1 Social impacts e.g. on: 

 

 

gender issues (who does the work, who gets the money, changes of the distribution of 
the workload, changes of the social status) 

 

 

people without own farm land (accessibility of seed, Jatropha in public forests for free 
collection); 

 

 

other social issues, like cultural/religious traditions (in some countries women are not 
allowed to own trees or farm land), or indigenous knowledge 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

29

 
4.2 Ecological impacts e.g. on: 

 

 

biodiversity and on the genetic diversity of the Jatropha species 

 

 

erosion and the desertification process 

 

 

rehabilitation of degraded land 

 
4.3 Economic impacts e.g. on:  

 

 

household income (sale of seeds, production and sale of oil, production and sale of soap); 

 

 

household food security (Jatropha is grown in form of hedges to protect food crops) 

 

 

farming systems (integration of Jatropha into the farming calender, Jatropha as integrated 
part of the farm design)  

 

 

the income situation in rural areas 

 

 

availability of renewal energy in the rural areas (household energy, fuel) 

 

 

creation of small business units (milling services, oil extraction services, entrepreneurs 
who buy seed and sell oil or products, soap making, etc) 

 

 

local, regional, international markets (availability of energy in the rural area changes the 
pattern of production, i. e. more edible oils may be produced, which improve the local diet 
and replace imported edible oils) 

 
5. Critical assessment of the Jatropha-System based on the findings 
 
6. Bibliography 
 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

30

Annex 2 - Jatropha in Ghana 

 

Jatropha activities in Ghana 

Since 2002, Jatropha Hamburg is the German cooperation partner of the Anuanom 
Biodiesel Project
 in Ghana. Though being a private enterprise initiative, the long-term 
socio-economic benefits of the Anuanom project have been recognised by the Ghanaean 
government. The production of bio-energy will have various positive effects for Ghana: the 
country has no own petroleum resources. The necessary importation of fossil fuels is a 
constant socio-economic effort, which has the same well-known effects as in other 
developing countries without petroleum: fuel shortage, high trade deficit, foreign 
indeptedness, lack of foreign exchange. At the same time, the lack of income perspectives in 
rural regions tends to increase the migration from the land to the cities, creating idle 
farmland on the one hand, growing poverty populations in cities on the other hand. The 
familiar picture.  
The Ghanaean government supports this project, because it will generate income for rural 
regions and, in the long run, will reduce the dependency on petroleum imports at the same 
time. The ministries of agriculture and energy, as well as the Presidential Office have 
documented their interest in the development of the project in written statements. In 
practice this means that authorization procedures are accelerated, and a purchase 
commitment is granted to the producers of biodiesel, which means the nation-wide 
marketing will be handled by the state.  
 
Current State of Development and Planning  
 
Cultivation of Jatropha curcas L.  
 
Anuanom operates a pilot plantation of ca. 100 ha which currently serves the production of 
Jatropha seeds. A highly productive variety bearing nuts with an oil content of 60-67% is 
raised here.  
The seeds are delivered to farmers in the country, who want to participate in the production 
of Jatropha curcas L.. Since 2000, an incentive program promotes the cultivation of Jatropha 
curcas. This agricultural program is granted international support by ADRA, an American 
NGO, as the organization in charge, and by the UNDP co-financing it with 50.000 USD. The 
Ghanaean Ministry of Agriculture backs up with personnel who promote Jatropha curcas L. in 
meetings with rural Local Assemblies giving information and training around the cultivation 
of the plant.  
Up to the present (May 2002) a total of ca. 2000 ha has been planted in Greater-Accra-
Region, Eastern Region and Western Region. The planted area is increasing by the week. 
The growth rate of plantations is expected to be boosted during 2003, when the processing 
production starts as planned, and the first harvest deliveries prove to yield cash income for 
growers. Up to 2004/2005, an increase of the total cultivating area to 250.000 ha is planned. 
This would be around a quarter of the total idle farmland in Ghana.  
 
Products and Markets  
 
Oil is won from the Jatropha nuts by cold-pressing. A part of it can flow back into the 
production process as generator fuel, or can be marketed as fuel. It is planned for the future 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

31

to generate electricity for the local energy market.  
Biodiesel is won by esterification of the oil with ethanol. Ethanol – unlike methanol which 
is a petroleum product and would have to be imported – can be won from local agricultural 
products as sugar cane. The centralized nation-wide marketing of the biodiesel is done by 
the Ministry of Energy. This appears to make sense for Ghana, because the petroleum 
importation is governmental , too. However, the project operators maintain the right to 
market an unlimited quantity of biodiesel on their own.  
Glycerin, the by-product of the esterification process, is to be purified and can then be sold 
on an extensive market. During the first stage, the demand in Ghana will be sufficient to buy 
the entire production. The market price is 500-600 USD/ton.  
The presscake is modified and sold as biological fertilizer, also primarily on the local 
market; but import agents from neighbouring countries in West Africa, such as Nigeria, have 
already confirmed their interest to be supplied.  
 
Production and Plants  
 
In 2003, the Anuanom project will enter a critical stage. The agricultural program will then 
deliver its first harvested production. The first production unit must be built up by then, and 
the money must be ready to be paid to the growers.  
As far as possible, manufacturers in Ghana will be taken as contractors to build the plant. For 
technical reasons, some of the components are to be manufactured in or bought from 
Europe:  

 

  Oil-presses: stamping presses operating with 70-100 tons of pressure are needed for the 

cold-pressing of the Jatropha nuts. Minimum capacity: 50 tons of nuts/day, equivalent of the 
expected harvested quantity of ca. 1000 tons/month during 2003/2004.  

 

  Stainless steel tank with mixer for the production of biodiesel; capacity: 10.000 l. Currently 

we are checking the market for used equipment fit for the purpose, e.g. from the dairy 
industry.  

 

  Distilling plant for ethanol; capacity: 200 tons of distillate/month = ca. 6-8 tons/day.  

 

  Purifying plant for glycerin.  

Financing  
 
Apart from the UN grant for the agricultural incentive program, the pre-production 
development of the project has been entirely financed with private resources by the project 
operators. A World Bank loan of 2 million USD has been signed and confirmed, the payment 
of which will be released by 2005. 2 million USD is the estimated investment needed to put 
up the first production unit and start operations in 2003. Our initiative group in Hamburg 
cooperates closely with an Austrian consulting team in order to secure the knock-on 
financing of the Anuanom project. This involves the application for governmental grants from 
EU development funds as well as contacting prospective private investors here. For a private 
engagement, an interest in a long-term investment would be essential.  
Provided agricultural production goes on spreading as planned, the project will reach its 
second stage in 2004/2005. This will make investments of ca. 10 million USD for further 
production units necessary.  

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

32

Annex 3 - BUN Zimbabwe 

PLANT OIL PRODUCTION AND UTILISATION  (extract fron BUN 
Zimbabwe newsletter)

 

The Plant Oil Project was successfully initiated at Makosa Mutoko, Zimbabwe in 1996 by 
BUN-Zimbabwe.  Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, Australian Agency for International 
Development (AusAid) and the Royal Netherlands Embassy, the plant oil project is expected 
to provide income, provide alternative manure and be an ecologically friendly source of 
alternative energy to rural farmers.   Makosa is fortunate to have the oil plants in abundance. 
The plants have traditionally been used as a live fence or hedge around homesteads and 
gardens and are called “

jirimono

” in several parts of Zimbabwe. 

 
The objectives of the project are the utilisation of the 

Jatropha Curcas Linn

 (JCL) plant 

(

physic nut in English

) as a source of oil for use as fuel for domestic and industrial purposes, 

and finding other uses of JCL.  BUN originally facilitated the acquisition of three oil expellers 
(two manual, one motorized) from local manufacturers for processing the seed into oil.  The 
oil is intended to be used in soap making and to a lesser extent in lamps for lighting purposes, 
substituting paraffin which is the usual lighting fuel in rural homes. 
 
The residue from the seed cake which is a good organic fertilizer is under investigation, with 
promising initial results. 
 
The community has received training in the use of the oil expeller and oil extraction is in 
progress at Makosa. In addition six women from the community underwent training in soap 
making.  After training they formed a soap making group and it has shown early signs of 
viability. The soap which lathers well, is of good quality and cheaper than most soaps. 
 
Since the establishment of the venture, it has provided the community and other surrounding 
areas with laundry soap.  The women’s group has opened a savings account with a 
commercial bank in Mutoko.  Improvements in soap quality are still underway, backed up by 
tests on samples sent to the Standards Association of Zimbabwe. 
 
Lamps to utilize JCL oil as a fuel have been designed which have a lower fuel burning rate 
than paraffin lamps.  The lamps operating on different wick mechanisms are easy to make. 
 
The trial use of JCL cake as an organic fertilizer was successful in 1998, showing the value of 
the cake as manure. Trials will be conducted to determine the optimum application rate. 
 
It is hoped that as the demand for JCL oil grows, more people will grow the hedges, 
contributing to income generation through sale of seeds, and improvement of the 
environment.  The project is expected to grow and become a more commercially oriented 
venture owned by the community. The Project hosted 19 Zambian trainees (farmers, NGOs 
and civil servants) sponsored by GTZ Zambia, and numerous Zimbabwean and international 
visitors and trainees. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

33

JCL Oil Press based on Sundhara design  

JCL Oil Press installed at Makosa in 1999 by BUN 

(

Photo BUN  99

)

 

One maize field showing the impact of JCL presscake 

applied  to the portion on the left hand size vs. cowdung 

on the right side. (

Photo BUN  1999)

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

34

Annex 4 - Environment Africa 

 

Environment 

Africa 

Victoria Falls 

Branch

 

 

Who are 

we?

 

        

 

Planting of hedges in urban areas 

One community group of five members representing both men and women has started up 
planting Jatropha curcas in the urban areas of Chinotimba, Victoria Falls. The group use both 
seedlings and cuttings of Jatropha. The seedling are raised in own nurseries and the cuttings 
are collected from existing fencing material in the neighbourhood. Jatropha is mainly planted 
on marginalized soil i.e. unused public areas and schools areas for fencing. The group 
involves the children and the teachers from local schools in the planting project and use the 
project as a teaching lesson for the children to raise awareness of the environment and to take 
ownership of the trees. The management and care of the plants is organized between the user 
group and administration of the School. 

Distribution of seeds to rural areas

 

Another Jatropha project involves the distribution of Jatropha seed to ten primary schools in 
rural areas in Hwange North. Every School is giving 2000 seeds of Jatropha and also some 
containers for planting the seeds. The intension is to commit the children and the schools to 
start making nurseries and afterwards either sell or plant the seedlings in the areas close to the 
school.  

The idea is that Environment Africa in future will buy the seedling from the schools for about 
200 z$ each and sell them as Tree Tickets. Tree Tickets is a concept where foundations or 
individuals can donate trees to a local rural area selected by the donor. Environment Africa 
will facilitate the planting and management of the trees. 

The school can also chose to plant the seedlings later harvest the seed and then sell them to 
Environment Africa for oil extraction. It’s the plan to start oil extraction at Chidobe 
Information and Research centre for demonstration and commercial production. At the 
moment Hlanganani Oil Pressing and Peanut Butter Making group has been donated a 
Bielenberg ram presser by DED.  

At the moment 12000 Jatropha seeds have been distributed in Hwange North. 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

35

An agreement with hotels etc regards collection of used water bottles. The bottles are used for 
water dripping system in the nurseries and as planting containers. 

Planting Jatropha in plantation 

 

In the rural area 1 hectare planted with Jatropha (

Jatropha curcas

) mixed with other oil 

species as Moringa (

Moringa oleifera

) and Neem (

Azadirachta indica

) are going to be 

initiated as research plot for further investigation. The plantation is going to be based on 
seedlings only.  

Environment Africa 
Box CT502  
Chinotimba  
Victoria Falls  
Zimbabwe

 

 

           
 

  

Jatropha nursery

 

 

Jatropha cuttings

 

 

 

Planting of Jatropha seeds

 

 

 

Planting of Jatropha cuttings

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

36

Annex 5 - Jatropha KwaZulu-Natal 

 
Emerald Oil International (Pty) Ltd. t/a Biodieselafrica 

From the desk of Bernd Schmidt 

 
 

Exploratory Mission 

 

The purpose of the mission to explore the level of Jatropha Curcas cultivation and the 
assessment of the capacities for and on behalf of the Department of Trade and Industry (dti) in 
Kwa Zulu Natal. 

 
On Wednesday 17

th

. And Thursday 18

th

.of December, Mr. Andre Kudlinski from dti and 

Mr. Bernd Schmidt from Biodieselafrica, visited amongst others Jatropha farms and 
institutions in KZN. We travelled about 800 Km. by Automobile.  
 

At the first meeting on Wednesday morning in Durban with Dr. Sid Kelly, Chief Executive Officer of the 
Richards Bay Industrial Development Zone (IDZ) Mr. Kelly has informed us, that the City of Richardsbay is 
promoting the growing of Jatropha Curcas on farmland of 4000 ha. in size, to demonstrate, that the City is 
standing behind the Bio Diesel project in Richards Bay. Funding made available by IDC. 

 
Our Journey is heading north 200 Km. to Empangeni to visit the Owen Sithole 
Agricultural College a Institution of the Department of Agriculture and Environmental 
Affairs (DAEA) under the management of Mr. Joseph Foli. This institute is involved in 
the growing of Jatropha and has been designated as the training facility for the 
farmers of the vicinity.  
 
Further North (180Km.) We visited the Agricultural research Centre of the DAEA near 
Jozini at the Makatini Flats. This visit was quite impressing, the research centre has 
produced a few thousand of Jatropha seedlings that are ready for distribution to the 
farmers in this area. Their experimental plantation of Jatropha with some trees 18 
month old,  already producing large amount of seeds. Tree size about 1.50 meter 
height.  The amount of seed approximately 2.5 Kg. per tree. Photo material on hand. 
 
We also met with local (Mtubatuba and Makatini Flats) farmers representatives 
involved in the Jatropha project. We where informed, that a large amount of small-
scale farmers are already producing Jatropha. 
 
Unfortunately, we run short of time so we couldn’t visit the largest ( 5 hectare) private 
plantation of Jatropha in the Mtubatuba area. Nor could we visit the plantation of the 
DAEA at Eshowe. 
 
Mr. Kudlinski has recognised the urgent need for funds to start coordinated training of 
Jatropha farmers and to finance the production and distribution of seedlings as well 
as the purchase of additional seed. The many tons of Jatropha seed, available until 
now in South Africa has been made available to the farming community exclusive by 
Mr. Bernd Schmidt. 
 Mr. Kudlinski will incorporate his comments and findings from our visit into the 
biodiesel project status report that should be ready by mid- January 2004. 
 

Report by: Bernd Schmidt 19 December 2003 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

37

Annex 6 - Wiemer, Summary of Economic Analysis 

 
 

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

38

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

39

Annex 7 - Economic analysis of JCL utilization in Tanzania 

 

Economy of Jatropha Utilization in Tanzania 

 

data from KAKUTE, 2003 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Collection of seeds: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

 

Collection of seeds: 2 kg in 1 hour 

 

 

 

 

Sale of seeds: 150 TZS per kg  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Value added for 1 hour work  

300 TZS

0,29 USD per hour 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oil extraction: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

 

5 kg of seed for 1 litre of oil is 1,7 hours of work 

 

 

 

1,0 hours of work to extract 1 litre of oil 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Input:  

5 kg of seed   

750 TZS

0,71 USD per litre 

 

 

1,5 hours of work to extract 1 litre of oil 

 

 

 

 

depreciation of ram press 0,02 USD / kg 

 

 

 

 

for 5 kg: 

 

105 TZS

0,10 USD per litre 

 

Output: 

Sale of 1 litre of oil 

2.000 TZS

1,90 USD  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Value added for 1 hour work  

1.145 TZS

1,09 USD per hour 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Soap making: (figures from KAKUTE, 2003) 

 

 

 

 

16 hours work for 252 bars of soap 

 

 

 

 

1 bar sold for 500 TZS 

 

 

 

 

 

Purchase of 20 litres of oil à 2.000 TZS = 40.000 

 

 

 

Purchase of 3 kg of Caustic Soda à 2.000 TZS = 6.000 TZS 

 

 

Plasic for wrapping soap = 3.000 TZS 

 

 

 

 

10 hours for miscelenous work (organising purchase of oil, wrapping the soap, etc) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Input:  

20 l oil 

 

40.000 TZS

38,10 USD  

  

Plastic 

 

3.000 

TZS

2,86 

USD 

 

  

Caustic 

Soda 

6.000 

TZS

5,71 

USD 

 

 

 

Total input for 26 hours work

49.000 TZS

46,67 USD  

 

Output: 

252 bars à 500 TZS 

126.000 TZS 120,00 USD  

 

Total of revenues 

 

77.000 TZS

73,33 USD  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Value added for 1 hour of work 

2.962 TZS

2,82 USD per hour 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

40

Annex 8 - Economy of Jatropha utilization in Zambia 

 
 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

41

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

42

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

43

Annex 9 - Wasteland rehabilitation 

 

Role of Jatropha in waste land rehabilitation 

 
 

The Tamilnadu State Government(India) order reads as below: 
 
Extract:  
 
Waste land development Programme -  setting up of TN wasteland 
Development Agency to implement comprehensive waste land Project; 
 
…. a project for reclaiming 20lakh ha of cultivable waste lands through a 
massive Wasteland Development Programme  is to be implemented over the 
next five years …. 
 
….. the higher grade waste lands with assured rainfall will be used for 
cultivation of medicinal and horticultural plants….. 
 
…..In medium grade waste lands. Oilseed plants comprising of Paradise 
tree and Jatropha will be planted for producing edible and fuel oil 
respectively…… 
 
 
order is dt18th September 2001 

 
 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

44

Annex 10 - The role of Jatropha in of Carbon sequestration 

 
 

ROJAC  CONSULTANTS 

Green Energy Technologies 

INDIA 

 
                                                                                                                                                    
12

th

 June '02 

                  
 
Dear. Mr.Reinhard K. Henning 
Please accept our congratulations, some of our inspirations have been from your informative 
web site. 
We have carried out research on the use the jatropha curcas oil seed and all its parts for 
energy purpose to make it an economically viable project. We can offer the know-how for  
production of biodiesel, bio-gas and biomass as energy products and  the oilseed cake is a 
very good bio-fertiliser. 
Based on our research our project was selected for presentation at the 3

rd

 International 

Investment Forum for Sustainable Energy. The presentation was on the 17

th

 of April '02 at 

Hanover in Germany.  
Funds can be arranged for large size project of 50,000 to 200,000hectares, after the initial 
investment the project can expand from the sale of carbon saved, as these are all green energy 
technologies. The involvement of the local Government is a must for this project.             
Best regards 
LUCAS ROSARIO 
Chief Executive 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

45

Annex 11 - Small scale farms with Jatropha hedges in Mozambique 

(Sebe de galamaluca = Jatropha hedges) 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

46

Annex 12 - Agricultural Calendar of Mali 

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

47

Annex 13 - Enterprise of Trust – Title page 

 
 

 

 

Title page of the book “Enterprise of Trust” available in the bookstore of ELCT in Arusha, 

Tansania and in the office of “North South Inititive e.V. in Munich, Germany 

(

eu.muenchen@t-online.de

). ISBN 3-934 145-17-5 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

48

Annex 14 - Paper for Public Field Day in KwaZulu/Natal 

 

 

background image

Jatropha curcas in Africa – an Evaluation 

 

Reinhard K. Henning, bagani, Rothkreuz 11, D-88138 Weissensberg, Germany 

e-mail: 

henning@bagani.de

, Jatropha website: 

www.Jatropha.org

  

49

 

Paper of the Jatropha Task Team of KwaZulu/Natal