Gourlot Jean-Paul, Aboe Modeste, Lukonge Everina.
2012. Variability study of the cotton fibers technological characteristics as measured by Standardized Instrument Testing Devices (SITC).
In : Commercial standardization of instrument testing of cotton with particular consideration of Africa : Final report of the project CFC/ICAC/33. Drieling Axel (ed.), Gourlot Jean-Paul (ed.). Faserinstitut Bremen, CIRAD-PERSYST-UPR SCA
Version publiée
- Anglais
Accès réservé aux personnels Cirad Utilisation soumise à autorisation de l'auteur ou du Cirad. document_565177.pdf Télécharger (145kB) |
Résumé : In appreciation of the technical and technological developments during the last decades, the international commerce of cotton is gradually moving from the manual and visual classification to classification based on results from instrumental testing. Now, going from one technique to the next requires studying their respective modalities and possibilities of application. Thus, commercial practices based on manual and visual classing came out onto the use of an arbitration process and onto the of arbitral tolerances allowing the settlement of possible litigations between sellers and buyers. It is then necessary to do the same for instrumental classing data, in particular in the cotton production conditions in Africa. The variability study of the fiber technological characteristics is a crucial step forward in the definition of the conditions of good realization of instrumental testing in order to limit the litigation risk between cotton producers in Africa and their international customers. It is also required to be more specific and to adapt the actual arbitral procedures to the instrumental classing. To perform these within-bale and between bales variability studies, Dr. Everina LUKONGE, post-doc employee, in Eastern and South-Eastern Africa, and Modeste ABOE, at that time a PhD student, in West and Central Africa were involved. These two persons were taking hundreds of samples in several ginning mills per country in fourteen African countries, while the same ginning mills were continuing to sample bales on the long-run during two crop seasons. All collected samples were tested in the laboratories of the respective Regional Technical Centers (RTCs) in Tanzania and in Mali. Thousands of results of samples tests from SITC were and are statistically looked at. The objective is to define operating methods for bale sampling and for testing collected cotton samples in order to warrant gained results and thus to limit the litigation risk between seller and buyer of the produced fibres. These instructions / recommendations are adding up to the ones which were given by the RTCs during the training sessions according to the best laboratory practices during the CFC/ICAC/33 Project duration (2007-2012).
Mots-clés Agrovoc : coton
Classification Agris : Q60 - Traitement des produits agricoles non alimentaires
U30 - Méthodes de recherche
Champ stratégique Cirad : Hors axes (2005-2013)
Auteurs et affiliations
- Gourlot Jean-Paul, CIRAD-PERSYST-UPR SCA (FRA) ORCID: 0000-0002-3231-3242
- Aboe Modeste, UHA (FRA)
- Lukonge Everina, Lake Zone Agricultural Research and Development Institute (TZA)
Autres liens de la publication
Source : Cirad - Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/565177/)
[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2024-01-28 ]