Ghana’s maize revolution: Legacy 52 promises to double farmers’ harvest with climate-smart power

By Emelia B. Addae 

Koforidua, May 20, GNA – The Legacy Crop Improvement Centre (LCIC), a pioneering force in Ghana’s seed industry, has officially introduced Legacy 52 , a cutting-edge hybrid maize variety engineered to transform smallholder and commercial farming across the country.  

With the capacity to yield an extraordinary 12 tonnes per hectare, Legacy 52 is not merely a new seed, it is a statement of what is possible when science meets the Ghanaian soil. 

Dr Amos Rutherford Azinu, Founder and Chief Executive of LCIC, said this in a statement copied to the Ghana News Agency in Koforidua. 

He said Ghana’s farming communities have long grappled with the unpredictable impacts of climate change, erratic rainfall, prolonged dry spells, and rising temperatures that threaten food security. 

Leegacy 52 was developed with these realities firmly in mind. Built on climate-smart technology, the variety incorporates advanced stay-green traits, a critical agronomic feature that allows the plant to remain physiologically active and productive even under moisture stress conditions, well past the grain-filling stage. 

He indicated that, stay-green maize varieties have been shown to maintain leaf greenness and photosynthetic activity longer than conventional varieties, giving crops a crucial advantage during late-season droughts.  

For Ghanaian farmers in the Coastal, Savannah, Transition, and Forest zones, this could be the difference between a failed harvest and a bumper crop, he added. 

Dr Azinu said the headline figure is striking: 12 tonnes per hectare. Ghana’s national average maize yield hovers around 1.7 to 3.5 tonnes per hectare, making Legacy 52’s potential output a quantum leap for the sector. 

Under optimal agronomic management, this variety can produce yields that rival the best performing maize hybrids on the African continent.  

” For Ghanaian farmers, the arithmetic is compelling: more grain per hectare means greater income, improved food security at the household level, and reduced pressure to expand onto marginal lands, ” he noted. 

Legacy 52 offers the possibility of turning subsistence farming into genuine commercial enterprise. 

Regarding the LCIC’s Vision: Empowering Ghana’s Seed Industry, he said Legacy Crop Improvement Centre has built its reputation on the premise that Ghanaian farmers deserve access to world-class seed technology.  

The launch of Legacy 52 underscores LCIC’s commitment to empowering Ghana’s seed industry through homegrown innovation and research-backed solutions. 

Legacy 52 is available as a Hybrid Maize Seed (Semence Hybride de Maïs), reflecting LCIC’s awareness of Ghana’s Francophone West African neighbours and the regional potential for this variety.  

The bilingual packaging signals ambitions that extend well beyond Ghana’s borders. 

He said farmers, agro-dealers, and agricultural input distributors interested in Legacy 52 are encouraged to contact Legacy Crop Improvement Centre directly. Early adoption of this variety positions farmers ahead of the curve in Ghana’s rapidly evolving agricultural landscape. 

As Ghana strives toward agricultural transformation and food self-sufficiency, innovations like Legacy 52 are not just welcome — they are essential.  

Legacy Crop Improvement Centre is inviting the nation’s farmers to be part of a harvest revolution. 

GNA  

Edited by D. I. Laary/Kenneth Odeng Adade 

Reporter: Emelia B. Addae 
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