Press Releases
Africa Food Systems Forum opens with bold call for systemic change
Dakar, Senegal, Wednesday, September 03, 2025 — This morning, at Africa’s largest gathering on food and agriculture, Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) in Dakar, Senegal, AGRA unveiled a powerful package of partnerships designed to unlock private capital, strengthen resilience, and elevate the voices of Africa’s youth.
The announcements come as the Africa Food Systems Report 2025 reveals a continent of progress and paradox: agricultural output has grown faster in Africa than anywhere else in the world at 4.3 percent annually since 2000, yet one in three African children is still stunted.
“Africa cannot afford piecemeal progress,” said Alice Ruhweza, President of AGRA. “We must seize this moment to scale inclusive innovations, attract investment, and put farmers, youth, and small businesses at the center of our food systems.”
Investing in Africa’s “Hidden Middle”
AGRA, in partnership with the Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund (AECF), launched Africa100, a catalytic initiative targeting 100 anchor firms across 12 countries. These often-overlooked small and medium sized enterprises, (the “hidden middle”), link farmers to markets, create rural jobs, and drive resilience.
AGRA also announced collaboration with the governments of Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and Tanzania to establish Investible Flagships, which are national pipelines of bankable projects that advance food security, climate resilience, and youth employment.
Transforming Poultry for Nutrition and Jobs
To boost affordable protein and rural livelihoods, AGRA introduced a Poultry Transformation Package, including:
Poultry Feed Innovation Grand Challenge, with AECF and the Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions (SACAU), to unlock inclusive, cost-cutting feed solutions across Southern Africa.
Southern Africa Poultry Initiative, culminating in the first Poultry Futures Forum in Zambia in November 2025.
Elevating Youth and Storytellers
Youth are taking center stage with new initiatives:
“Africa’s young people are not just the future,” added Ruhweza. “They are today’s farmers, innovators, and storytellers, and their voices must shape the global food narrative.”
Linking Nutrition to Markets
In collaboration with African First Ladies and the Rockefeller Foundation, AGRA announced a School Meals Coalition that links smallholder farmers with school feeding programs, ensuring nutritious, locally sourced meals while creating steady markets for farmers.
A Call for Systemic Change
The Africa Food Systems Report 2025 warns that progress remains “real but fragmented” and calls for bold systemic transformation. AGRA’s new initiatives respond with catalytic finance, investible value chains, and platforms for youth and advocacy.
“Our message is clear,” said Ruhweza. “Africa’s food future is not just about producing more; it’s about producing better. By investing in SMEs, empowering youth, and building resilient markets, we are building systems that nourish, employ, and prosper.”
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About AGRA
AGRA works with governments, the private sector, and partners to transform agriculture across Africa. Since 2006, it has supported thousands of SMEs and millions of farmers, strengthening markets, improving seed and input systems, and catalyzing investment.
Media Contact
Communications Office – AGRA
Email: communications@agra.org