AGRA

Former Ethiopia PM urges Africa’s leaders to prioritize agriculture in accelerating food security, poverty eradication

NAIROBI, Kenya: June 28 June 2021 –  Former Ethiopia Prime Minister and Board Chair of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) , H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn, has called on African leaders to prioritize investment in agriculture for food and nutrition security, and strengthened economies.

H.E Dessalegn was speaking in Nairobi, Kenya, during a week-long tour where he met with the country’s president, H.E. Uhuru Kenyatta, for high-level discussions on the future of Africa’s agricultural and food systems. 

His visit came ahead of the UN Food Systems Summit in September, where the world’s leaders will evaluate progress towards the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG 2  the eradication of hunger from the continent. 

The AGRA delegation, that included the organization’s President, Dr Agnes Kalibata briefed  President Uhuru Kenyatta on preparation for the AGRF 2021 Summit to be held in Nairobi, Kenya in September. The team hailed the decision, with H.E. Dessalegn stating: “On behalf of AGRA and the AGRF partners, we are delighted to be holding our Forum in Kenya where great strides have been made towards SDG 2 to eradicate hunger and increase nutrition and food security”. 

The platform of 26 AGRF Partners is responsible for organising the world’s premier forum for advancing Africa’s agricultural agenda. Every year, the AGRF Secretariat gathers thousands of delegates including political leaders, agripreneurs, scientists, the media and thought leaders in a four-day forum to discuss innovative ways to fast-track an agricultural transformation in Africa. This is the second time that the event is taking place in Kenya, after a successful edition in 2016. 

H.E Dessalegn noted that agriculture is critical to ending poverty and hunger by 2030, and called on leaders to act urgently in driving the required change.

During his tour, H.E. Dessalegn visited Kiambu, a farming county bordering the capital, Nairobi, where he met with Village Based Advisors (VBAs) –farmers recruited and trained by AGRA to offer extension support to other farmers in their communities. 

The VBAs accompanied him on a farm visit to showcase the impact of their work in the development of their region’s food systems. 

H.E. Dessalegn also hosted the country’s  private sector leaders in a dialogue to discuss their key role in the recovery and sustainability of food systems following the devastation brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

In his presentation, he appealed for the active engagement of private sector players in developing strong systems that will fast-track the journey to an agricultural transformation.  

“The private sector plays a key role in investing to support framers access the right yield enhancing technologies, finance, markets, post-harvest technologies, irrigation, and mechanization services,” he said.

H.E. Dessalegn reminded the private sector players of the opportunities at the AGRF, notably the Deal Room, where important partnerships are struck every year for the benefit of Africa’s farmers.

“Those seeking investors will be able to share their investment needs with over 50 global investors with an interest in African agriculture. Over the past three years more than 300 African companies have shared investment needs in excess of USD 1.4 billion,” he said.

-ENDS

About AGRA

Established in 2006, AGRA is an African-led and Africa-based institution that puts smallholder farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economy by transforming agriculture from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives. Together with our partners, we catalyze and sustain an inclusive agricultural transformation to increase incomes and improve food security for 30 million farming households in 11 African countries by 2021.

More information: https://agra.org/; Rebecca Weaver, rweaver@agra.org 

About AGRF

The AGRF is the premier forum for African agriculture, bringing together stakeholders in the agricultural landscape to take practical actions and share lessons that will move African agriculture forward. The Forum is designed to energize political will and advance the policies, programs and investments required to achieve an inclusive and sustainable agricultural transformation across the continent. 

More information: https://agrf.org; Catherine Ndung’u cndungu@agra.org

Former Ethiopia PM arrives in Ghana to urge leaders to prioritize agriculture in accelerating food security, poverty eradication

NAIROBI, Kenya: June 27 June 2021 –  Former Ethiopia Prime Minister and Board Chair of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) , H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn, arrived in Ghana today on the third leg of a pan-African mission to urge leaders to prioritize investment in agriculture for food security and strengthened economies.

His visit is coming  ahead of the UN Food Systems Summit in September, where the world’s leaders will evaluate progress towards the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG 2  the eradication of hunger from the continent. 

The AGRA delegation includes the organistion’s President, Dr Agnes Kalibata. They will meet with the president of Ghana H.E, Nana Akufo-Addo on Monday 28 June. The AGRA delegation will also meet with development partners and conduct field visits. 

 As well as lauding the progress that Ghana has made  to advance the country’s inclusive agriculture transformation, they will  brief  President Nana Akufo-Addo on preparations for the AGRF 2021 Summit to be held in Nairobi, Kenya in September.

-ENDS

About AGRA

Established in 2006, AGRA is an African-led and Africa-based institution that puts smallholder farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economy by transforming agriculture from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives. Together with our partners, we catalyze and sustain an inclusive agricultural transformation to increase incomes and improve food security for 30 million farming households in 11 African countries by 2021.

More information: https://agra.org/; Rebecca Weaver, rweaver@agra.org 

About AGRF

The AGRF is the premier forum for African agriculture, bringing together stakeholders in the agricultural landscape to take practical actions and share lessons that will move African agriculture forward. The Forum is designed to energize political will and advance the policies, programs and investments required to achieve an inclusive and sustainable agricultural transformation across the continent. 

More information: https://agrf.org; Catherine Ndung’u cndungu@agra.org


CROPIN-AGRA Partnership Taps Into Digital Technologies To Boost Africa’s Extension Service Coverage

May 25, 2021: CropIn and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) have partnered in a new program that seeks to increase the access to extension services by farmers in Africa. AGRA works with governments, private sector companies and other organizations to bring knowledge and extension services to farmers throughthe use of self-employed Village-Based Advisors (VBAs).

In the new partnership, CropIn and AGRA will select and train 10,626 entrepreneurial VBAs to reach three million farmers in Ghana, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Mali, Tanzania and Mozambique. The VBAs will facilitate the training of farmers through ‘mother and baby’ demonstrations – where ‘mother’ is a demonstration site and ‘baby’ is the farmer’s own plot. Regular performance comparisons of the ‘mother and baby’ plots will be made to assess the quality of training received by farmers.

CropIn, an artificial intelligence (AI) led Software as a Service (SaaS) based agritech organization, will also offer a centralized digitalization platform that will be accessed by AGRA, its implementation partners and VBAs for a comprehensive review of farmer engagements. SaaS is a software licensing and delivery model in which software is licensed on a subscription basis and is centrally hosted. The platform will generate farmer scores based on the historical performance of their plots and other socio-economic factors, enabling CropIn and AGRA to make appropriate adjustments in their support. Additionally, the digitalization of VBA activity will enhance their linkages with other service providers to increase their capacity for the last-mile delivery of agricultural inputs and services.

CropIn’s Chief Revenue Officer, Jitesh Shah, said:“In these unprecedented times, VBAs have restricted movement, and are unable to train farmers in gatherings of more than 2-10 persons. There is, therefore, a critical need to improve on a digital extension to ensure that farmers continue to gain access to information, and the inputs they need to sustainably increase productivity and income. Knowledge dissemination and advisory services to farmers via VBAs will be provided through the digital platform by the remotely-placed agronomists. Advisories provided will be on sustainable farming practices, pest and disease outbreak, weather forecast, and more. We expect to see significant growth in this sector once our solutions are implemented”.

AGRA’s Vice President of Strategic Partnerships, Vanessa Adams, added “There has not been a time when extension and related agribusiness services have been needed more than now. Amidst new challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic related market volatility, locust attacks, and the growing effects of climate change, farmers in Africa need all the support available to build resilient and highly productive agricultural systems. Thankfully, we are now able to scale up digital technologies to work around some of the accessibility limitations to sustain impactful interactions linking farmers to agro-dealers and markets across the continent. We see this partnership with CropIn as one of many critical COVID responses to strengthen the VBAs and their farmer services support towards improved livelihoods. This is a learning initiative as well, where the data generated will be critical in informing future plans for last mile development.”

Public sector-driven extension systems in most African countries have been severely weakened by poor logistical support, inadequate training of personnel at local levels and a lack of access to agricultural technologies by farmers. As a result, the extension worker to farmer ratio in most African countries is currently 1:3500 (with many countries reaching 1:10,000) against the recommended 1:400.

The skewed ratio, lack of knowledge on advanced technology and infrastructural lapses pose a huge problem for most farmers, who must travel distances of up to 20km to access farm inputs and extension services even during the best of times. In the pandemic era, compounded by climate shocks, this situation is worsened during COVID-19 by the restriction of physical movement for farmers, agricultural service providers and traders. It is such challenges that informed AGRA’s decision to focus on the development of private sector extension networks as a critical enabler towards inclusive agricultural transformation.

About CropIn

CropIn is a leading global AI-driven agtech​ organization that provides SaaS and data solutions to ag-enterprises globally. The company enables businesses in the agriculture ecosystem to adopt a data-driven approach through its ground-to-cloud technology solutions. CropIn’s unique suite of platforms enable various stakeholders to adopt and drive digital strategy across their crop value-chains and operations. The company empowers the ag-enterprises with data insights that help drive initiatives around Digitization, Predictability, Traceability, Financial Inclusion, Climate Smart Agriculture and Sustainability. CropIn has so far positively impacted 13 million acres of farmland and 4 million farmers across 52+ countries.

About AGRA

Established in 2006, AGRA is an African-led and Africa-based institution that puts smallholder farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economy by transforming agriculture from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives. Together with our partners, we catalyse and sustain inclusive agriculture transformation to increase the incomes and improve food security for 30 million farming households in 11 African countries by 2021. More info: www.agra.org

Partnership for Inclusive Agricultural Transformation in Africa (PIATA)

PIATA is a unique strategic partnership launched in 2017 that enables African agriculture actors to do business differently as they support leaders to drive an inclusive agricultural transformation. The innovative partnership is driving integrated delivery within agro-economic zones and across value chains, enhanced in-country coordination to leverage wider investments and deliberate engagement with the private sector to build sustainable systems that will transition agriculture from subsistence into a business that works.  More info: www.agra.org/piata/

Media Contacts:

Jyoti Vaddi, Director of Marketing, CropIn

jyoti@cropin.com, +91-9177433078

Rebecca Weaver, Acting Head of Communications, AGRA, rweaver@agra.org

PAFO and AGRA sign a memorandum of understanding to support smallholder farmers

Kigali, 14 April 2021: The Pan-African Farmers Organization (PAFO) and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) have signed a cooperation and partnership agreement to strengthen the capacities of African farmers’ organizations to ensure that they provide effective services to smallholder farmers, especially women and youth.

The agreement will see AGRA supporting Farmers’ Organizations to drive policy advocacy around common areas of interest. This includes bringing together continental, regional and national level issues connected to goals outlined in the Africa Agriculture Transformation Scorecard (1) and the Malabo Declaration (2) to advocate for specific policy and other investments required to drive inclusive agricultural transformation in Africa.

Furthermore, the partnership will support programs that ensure that women and young farmers have access to productive resources and structured markets, and address gender and socio-cultural norms. 

This agreement was signed during a ceremony on 8 April at the PAFO headquarters in Kigali (Rwanda), by Ms. Elizabeth Nsimadala, President of PAFO and Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President of AGRA.

Thanks to this partnership, PAFO and AGRA have a framework of cooperation capable of facilitating collaboration between the two organizations, on a non-exclusive basis in areas of mutual interest.

Mrs. Elizabeth Nsimadala, PAFO president stated “This partnership comes when PAFO is launching its new strategic plan for 2021/2025.  We view this partnership as a strong one which will allow PAFO to implement its new strategy for the next five years. But she added “We must focus on achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals”. She continued by saying: “It is the right time to build an ecosystem where different players in the agriculture sector need to move together because our aim in general is to empower our farmers economically, to make sure we end hunger, poverty, to create gender equality and to work around food transformation.”

Dr. Kalibata noted “I applaud the new partnership between AGRA and PAFO that brings the two institutions together to support smallholder farmers and other producers and help contribute to building back better across the continent in the wake of COVID-19. The partnership marks a major step forward towards building an inclusive, more resilient, and sustainable food system for African smallholder farmers, especially women and youth.”

More information:

About PAFO

The Pan-African Farmers’ Organization (PAFO) is a continental organization with a membership base composed of Regional Farmers Networks. PAFO is the voice of more than 80 million African farmers integrated into nearly 70 national organizations, unions, federations, cooperatives, associations, etc., present in more than 45 countries on the continent, and united in five regional networks operating at the heart of African agriculture: EAFF; PROPAC; ROPPA; SACAU and UMNAGRI.

Website: http://www.pafo-africa.org/

About AGRA

Established in 2006, AGRA is an African-led and Africa-based institution that puts smallholder farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economy by transforming agriculture from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives. 

Together with our partners, we catalyse and sustain inclusive agriculture transformation to increase the incomes and improve food security for 30 million farming households in 11 African countries by 2021.

Website: http://www.agra.org/

Media contacts

Insaf Boughdiri, Communication Officer

communication@pafo-africa.org

Rebecca Weaver, Acting Head, Communications

rweaver@agra.org

AGRA Re-affirms Support to Malawi in Achieving an Inclusive Agricultural Transformation

LILONGWE, April 03, 2021: – The Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn, former Prime Minister of Ethiopia, today (April 03, 2021) held a meeting with the President of the Republic of Malawi, Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera, during which he updated the President on AGRA’s successful engagement and support to Malawi’s agriculture sector through the Government of Malawi. He affirmed his commitment of supporting Malawi to transform its economy going forward.

H.E. Dessalegn started by congratulating H.E Dr. Lazarus McCarthy Chakwera on winning the 23rd June 2020 Presidential elections in Malawi.

He continued: “The Affordable Inputs Program (AIP), which your Government launched in 2020, has already reached 3.7 million smallholder farmers who could hardly access fertilizer and improved seed. This is a huge achievement considering the very short period since your Government took charge of state affairs”, he said.

The US$187 million (MwK140.2 billion) AIP was designed to improve agricultural productivity in Malawi by subsidizing the cost of agricultural inputs for the benefit of the country’s farmers. Still in its first year, the AIP, which initially targeted 4.2mn smallholder farming households, allows farmers to, for example, buy a 50kg bag of fertilizer at an affordable US$6 instead of the usual US$25-28.

H.E the Board Chair of AGRA, briefed H.E the President of the Republic of Malawi about his visit to Nkhotakota, Benga where he appreciated the work of a local seed company (Global Seeds) that is being supported by AGRA Malawi. He also saw first hand how the newly developed groundnut varieties of GG 9 and CG 11 which were bred for their rosette resistance trait have been commercialized by smallholder farmers thereby transforming their livelihoods.

The AGRA Board Chair also briefed President Chakwera on the Hub Agro dealer extension and agro-input distribution model through Community Agribusiness Advisors in Nathenje/Lilongwe East. This model facilitates agriculture service delivery to smallholders through women cooperative groups known as Village Banks/Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs).

“The Agro dealer hub model is an engine for facilitating Malawi’s rural transformation. There is need to continue supporting Research institutions to develop better high yielding crop varieties. There is also need to de-risk lending to smallholder farmers and support them to produce three times a year through irrigation. Lake Malawi presents a huge opportunity for irrigation and land does not seem a challenge for the country. Malawi is on the right path towards achieving an inclusive agriculture transformation”, H.E. Dessalegn said.

About AGRA Malawi

AGRA has been operating in Malawi since 2006 but was established as a country office in 2017. All major continental AGRA programmes have been implemented in Malawi, including the Soil Health Programme (SHP), the Programme for Africa’s Seed Systems (PASS), and the Scaling Seeds and Technologies Partnership in Africa (SSTP). Over the years, AGRA has spent more than $23 million in Malawi through grants supporting capacity building, research and development, input production and distribution, agriculture transformation awareness, adoption and production and post-harvest handling. It currently supports Government to develop and implement policies that result in a conducive environment for a private sector- led agriculture transformation; strengthening Government capacity to deliver on its priorities and mandate; strengthening agriculture systems (inputs, financing, markets, mechanization, extension) and working with strategic partnerships to facilitate the alignment of government priorities and private sector interests, improving integration and coordination that lead to investments beneficial to smallholder farmers. AGRA is supported by the Partnership for an Inclusive Agriculture Transformation in Africa: BMGF, USAID, The Rockefeller Foundation, FCDO and BMZ, among others.

For more information, please contact:

Media Contacts

AGRA Malawi
Sophie Chitedze
Country Manager
Tel: +265 884222008 Email: SChitedze@agra.org Website: www.agra.org

AGRA hosts African Women Leaders to Discuss How Women Can Drive Equality and Transformation in Africa’s Agriculture and Food Systems

Nairobi, 8 March 2021 – The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) hosted leading African women, to explore how their unique platforms could help amplify the needs of women in agriculture across the continent.

H.E. Amb. Josefa Sacko, Commissioner for Rural Economy & Agriculture, African Union (AU) Commission joined Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President at AGRA and UN Special Envoy on Food Systems Summit and other African women leaders from various fields to discuss how women could bring change to Africa’s agriculture and food systems. The discussions also explored how to inspire a groundswell of successful women agribusinesses in the continent.

The discussions were in line with this year’s IWD theme – Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world. 

H.E. Amb. Josefa Sacko, the keynote speaker at the event, reiterated African Union’s goal of gender equality as a fundamental human right and an integral part of regional integration, economic growth and social development. She highlighted the AU’s strategy for Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment (GEWE) to ensure the inclusion of women in Africa’s development agenda.

Participants echoed that women are key players in the sector, amplifying the need for exploring how their organizations can not only help amplify the needs of women in agriculture and women across the continent, but also finding solutions to endemic inequalities in the sector that continue to undermine women’s capacity to respond and recover from the impact of COVID-19. To meet some of these challenges, AGRA kicked off the Resilience Investment Series for Women Executives (ARISE) program. The program seeks to seeks to equip women-owned and women-led SMEs with the necessary tools and practical management skills, needed to recover from the impact of COVID-19 pandemic.

Speaking at a fireside chat at the event, Dr. Kalibata stressed the effects of the climate change coupled with inequalities in accessing land and other agricultural resources that undermine women’s capacity to respond and recover from the impact of this pandemic. Furthermore, the gendered access to opportunities means that women and men have different resources available to them to prepare for, cope with, and recover from the crisis.  

The event was sponsored by AGRA’s VALUE4HER program, a platform whose aim is to increase incomes and employment opportunities for women by linking women-led agribusinesses with competitive high value regional and global markets, and improving women business leader’s technical and managerial skills, with training on market dynamics, to grow their agribusinesses further. Join the VALUE4HER digital platform – https://value4her.hivebrite.com/

–END–

For more information, please contact: Ms. Sabdiyo Dido, Head of Gender and Inclusiveness, AGRA at sdido@agra.org

About AGRA

Established in 2006, AGRA is an African-led and Africa-based institution that puts smallholder farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economy by transforming agriculture from a solitary struggle to survive into farming as a business that thrives. 

Together with our partners, we catalyse and sustain inclusive agriculture transformation to increase the incomes and improve food security for 30 million farming households in 11 African countries by 2021.

Press Release: AGRF 2020 Concludes with Call for Greater Focus on Urban Food Markets, Providing More Sustainable Food Supplies Across Africa

The 10th African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF) drew 10,400 delegates to rethink Africa’s food systems to deliver a more resilient, better nourished, and more prosperous future for all.

Kigali, Rwanda: 14 September 2020 – The 10th edition of the annual African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF) in Kigali Rwanda, saw heads of state, government ministers, civil society, and business leaders resolve to use the flourishing urban food markets as a launchpad for growing the continent’s agricultural investments into stable businesses.

The AGRF, the world’s premier forum for advancing Africa’s agricultural agenda, drew a large and diverse crowd of more than 10,400 delegates from all over the world to analyze the state of African agriculture under the theme, Feed the Cities, Grow the Continent: Leveraging Urban Food Markets to Achieve Sustainable Food Systems in Africa.

The theme was a call to action to rethink Africa’s food systems in order to deliver a more resilient, better nourished, and more prosperous outcome for all. During the Forum, technical assessments, policy analyses and political discussions reached a new level of consensus that could accelerate the efforts to reach the goals in the Malabo Declaration, and make farming in Africa more productive, profitable, sustainable and inclusive.

Speaking in his closing Presidential Address, H.E. Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda, commented “Increasingly, African consumers live in cities. Our continent has the world’s fastest rates of urbanization and will continue to do so, for decades to come. The quality of that urbanization depends, in large part, on ensuring solid linkages between urban food markets and Africa’s rural producers… Agriculture is critical, and we must stay the course despite COVID19. We will need better collaboration on fiscal space, and we need to maximize the opportunities around technology, youth, gender and the AfCFTA.”

H.E. Hailemariam Dessalegn, Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia and Chair, AGRF Partners Group, said: “We must do more to achieve the vision and goals we have set for ourselves”.

During the four-day summit, delegates explored innovative ways to streamline the continent’s agricultural value chains. Until now, traditional hurdles have made it hugely difficult for Africa’s farmers to sufficiently serve the rising urban food demand.

Agripreneurs, youth entrepreneurs and business leaders showcased innovative models, ready for investment and scaling, while scientists, researchers and thought leaders demonstrated ways in which policy amendments and innovative technology could lead to stronger agricultural value chains.

Meanwhile, public sector leaders shared their experience in delivering inclusive market-strengthening, policies and investments that stimulate strong food security plans across the continent. This is in a bid to leverage urban markets and drive a new era of innovative programs and investments for the benefit of Africa’s agricultural producers and consumers.

“As Africa’s economies advance and cities grow, we need to seize the moment and improve linkages to Africa’s largest producers – its millions of smallholder farmers- by investing more in urban food markets, coherence of food governance between cities and producers and food safety. These will enhance the competitiveness of our food industry, bolster regional food trade, and position Africa to be a better trade partner with the rest of the world,” Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President of AGRA and Special Envoy to the 2021 UN Food Systems Summit, said. She continued, “We must not relent in our effort to transform food systems for the benefit of everyone and build stronger, resilient and more sustainable food systems.”

Deliberations at the forum made it clear that coordinated efforts between players in the public and private sector actors can unlock the potential of Africa’s agricultural endeavors, leading to food sufficiency for all. The event closed with an appeal for environmentally and commercially sustainable agricultural practices that quickly respond to emerging challenges such as Covid-19, climate change and locust invasions.

Highlights from this year’s summit included:

  • The launch of the 2020 Africa Agricultural Status Report, Feeding Africa’s Cities, assessing the opportunities, challenges and policies required to enable African farmers and agribusinesses serve the rapidly growing urban food markets.
  • The Agribusiness Deal Room this year, which drew around 208 businesses, 55 financial investors, 20 business development service providers and 54 anchor buyers, saw over 1,000 investment and partnership meetings take place. This is a space curated by AGRA and partners to nurture productive, business and investment partnerships in the African agri-food ecosystem.
  • The 2020 winners of the Africa Food Prize (AFP) and the GoGettaz Agripreneur Award were announced. Dr. Catherine Nakalembe and Dr. André Bationo shared the $100,000 Africa Food Prize for their exceptional contribution towards the promotion of food security across the continent.

This was the second time that the AGRF has taken place in Kigali, Rwanda after the successful event of 2018.

-ENDS

For more details on the discussions, decisions, commitments and key outcomes of AGRF 2020, please see the AGRF media room.

About the AGRF

The African Green Revolution Forum was first held in 2006 as the African Green Revolution Conference (AGRC), hosted by Yara International ASA in Norway. The conference moved to Africa in 2010 with the championing of former UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, who oversaw its transition to an African identity. The Forum now consists of an annual event combined with thematic platforms and activities throughout the year to ensure continuous progress over time. Rwanda is the second country, after Ghana, to host the event twice, having successfully hosted the 2018 edition. Afterwards, Rwanda will host the event in alternate years, having been named the home of the AGRF seat. Other AGRF member countries will host the Forum in the years between. In its current format, the AGRF is organized by the AGRF Partners Group, a coalition of institutions that care about Africa’s agriculture transformation.

About the AGRF Partners Group

The AGRF Partners Group is made up of 26 leading actors in African agriculture all focused on putting farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economies. Members include: African Development Bank (AfDB), African Fertilizer and Agribusiness Partnership (AFAP), African Union Commission (AUC), Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), Bayer AG, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA), CGIAR System Organization, Corteva Agriscience, Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO), Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), Government of Rwanda, Grow Africa (AUDA-NEPAD), IKEA Foundation, International Development Research Center (IDRC), International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Mastercard Foundation, OCP Group, Rockefeller Foundation, Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions (SACAU), Sustainable Trade Initiative (IDH), Syngenta Foundation, UPL Limited, US Agency for International Development (USAID), Yara International ASA.

For Media Inquiries Contact:

Saburi Chirimi: saburi.chirimi@portland-communications.com
For more information on the AGRF agenda and partners visit www.agrf.org.

ABC Fund makes first investment, backing cocoa cooperative in Côte d’Ivoire

· The ABC Fund was initiated by the International Fund for Agricultural Development in partnership and with funding from the European Union, the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States, the Luxembourg Government and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa. It is managed by Bamboo Capital Partners, in partnership with Injaro Investments.
· This investment will support over 2,700 cocoa farmers and is the first of a series of investments into cocoa cooperatives that together will help 10,000 cocoa farmers gain greater market access and secured revenue.

13 December 2019, Luxembourg – The Agri-Business Capital Fund (ABC Fund) has made its first investment. The ABC Fund, managed by Bamboo Capital Partners, in partnership with Injaro Investments, has invested in a cocoa cooperative based in Côte d’Ivoire – Socak Katana. This investment will help the cocoa farmers secure market access and revenue. The financial details of this transaction are not disclosed.
Located in the North Western Region of Côte d’Ivoire, Socak Katana has over 2,700 members and procures raw cocoa from its members before processing, transporting, storing and selling the cocoa beans to local and international buyers. It provides other services including technical assistance and training of cooperative members. Currently, the cooperative has a total production capacity of 6,000 metric tons with a total of about 8,400 hectares under cultivation by the cocoa farmers. The cooperative is
Fairtrade certified1 and 54% of the cooperative’s cocoa farmers are UTZ certified.

The investment will help secure revenue for smallholder farmers, by providing the cooperative with funds needed to buy their production. The cooperative also enables its members to earn a better price by benefitting from premiums under Fairtrade and UTZ certifications. It will also increase the number of people Socak Katana temporarily and permanently employs due to the increase in the volume of cocoa to be handled. This investment is a first step towards the ABC Fund’s goal to support rural employment and
improve farmers’ livelihood in developing countries.
Jerry Parkes, CEO of Injaro Investments Ltd commented: “We are excited about this first investment of the ABC Fund that will increase farmers’ earnings and support rural communities. Improving earnings for rural farmers has an important multiplier effect as each farmer typically supports several household members. We look forward to making more investments that demonstrate the power of impact capital to improve lives in rural agricultural communities”.

This investment is the first of a series of ABC Fund investments into cocoa cooperatives which have enjoyed important growth in recent years and count almost 10,000 producers among their members. Cocoa production is a major economic growth driver for West Africa. Côte d’Ivoire, the world’s leading producer of cocoa beans, is particularly dependent on the crop, which accounts for 30% of national export
income. Small-scale farming is one of the biggest industries in the world, with 500 million small farms and 2.5 billion people relying on small-scale farming every day, significantly contributing to food security
in developing countries.

Jean-Philippe de Schrevel, Founder and Managing Partner of Bamboo Capital Partners commented: “This first investment is a symbolic moment for the ABC Fund. A few months after its incorporation, the fund is already contributing towards supporting livelihood and creating jobs for cocoa
farmers’ communities in Côte d’Ivoire. This is the first step on our journey to transform small-scale farming in developing countries and we look forward to announcing further investments in due course.”
The ABC Fund is a blended-finance impact fund which provides catalytic financing to underserved yet profitable segments of agribusiness value chains in developing countries. The ABC Fund deploys loans and equity investments in farmer organizations, rural SMEs and financial institutions. They have potential for high growth and job creation, and can also drive social development for their own communities and countries, but they often lack the capital they need to grow their businesses. The demand for impact investing in rural agriculture is growing as investors strive to end poverty and hunger to support the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. The ABC Fund was initiated by the International Fund for Agricultural Development in partnership and with funding from the European Union, the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States, the Luxembourg Government and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa.

-ENDS

Media Contacts:
Lewis Hill or Justine Crestois
+44 20 7457 2020
bamboo@instinctif.com

Africa’s Premier Agriculture Forum Secures $500 Million for Young ‘Agripreneurs’, More than $200 Million in Agribusiness Venture Capital, and Major New Efforts to Advance Digital Farmer Services

Leaders from across Africa and around the world pledge new action to address the impacts of climate change on food production while revealing the hidden power of African agribusiness

(Accra, Ghana, September 6, 2018)– A $500 million commitment to developing agriculture opportunities for young Africans, a “Deal Room” that delivered some $200 million in new investments, billions to support digital infrastructure crucial for powering innovative farmer services, significant actions on climate change adaptation, and the launch of a major food trade coalition: These are among the highlights of the 2019 African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF), which attracted some 2800 participants from across Africa and around the world this week for three days of intensive consultations in Accra.

“The potential benefits of the AGRF to the African continent are beyond contention,” said Ghana President H.E. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. “We must galvanize our collective resources and energy to fully exploit the opportunities it presents.”

AGRF is the world’s premiere forum for African agriculture, pulling together stakeholders across the agricultural landscape to discuss and commit to programs, investments and policies to achieve an inclusive and sustainable agricultural transformation across the continent. This year, the event returned to Ghana, host of the first AGRF in 2010. Ghana is also the home of former UN Secretary General, the late Kofi Annan, founder of both the AGRF and the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), and a leading voice for the power of smallholder farmers to drive major reductions in poverty across the continent.

Investing in Africa’s Most Powerful Farming Asset: Its Growing Ranks of Young People

A marquee commitment secured at AGRF 2019 was the announcement from the Mastercard Foundation to invest $500 million to launch a new Young Africa Works program. The initiative will provide a major infusion of capital to support the efforts of a new generation of young “agripreneurs” who are investing their talent in farming and other agriculture-oriented ventures.

“This generation is not just heeding the call, they are leading the charge and changing the narrative of the 21stcentury African farmer,” said Reeta Roy, the Foundation’s President. “Their vision of farming is more business-oriented and more tech-enabled.”

She said the $500 million commitment to Young Africa Works brings the Foundation’s total investments in African agriculture to $1 billion.

Here’s the Deal: Venture Capital is Gravitating to African Agribusinesses

This year’s AGRF featured a vibrant Agribusiness Deal Room that was a hub of activity, securing the Forum as a prime venue for connecting innovators with critically needed capital.

Private and public sector stakeholders executed commitments worth over $200 million to develop and strengthen several value chains in Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Uganda and Eswatini. Companies involved included Dangote Farms Ltd.  of Nigeria, Press Agriculture Ltd of Malawi,  Pearl Dairies Ltd. of Uganda, and Fresh Ltd. of Mozambique and Eswatini. In addition, a Unilever-IDH partnership committed $28.6 millions towards investments in small and medium size enterprises (SMEs) working in variety of food-related endeavors.

Some 17 country delegations presented investment opportunities worth in excess of $2 billion. The proposed investments, coupled with support from various stakeholders, is anticipated to impact more than 15,000 smallholder farmers and create seven million jobs.

The Agribusiness Deal Room at the AGRF was made possible with the support of core design partners, including the African Enterprise Challenge Fund (AECF), AGRA, the African Development Bank (AfDB), CrossBoundary, GAIN,  GrowAfrica, the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, and the US Agency for International Development (USAID). The Deal Room also received advisory support from the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Embracing the Potential of Digital Innovations for African Agriculture

A prime example of the surge of agribusiness endeavors in Africa can be found in the rapidly growing world of digitally-enabled agriculture services, which are proving particularly popular among younger Africans. The theme of this year’s AGRF was “Grow Digital: Leveraging Digital Transformation to Drive Sustainable Food Systems in Africa.” AGRF 2019 featured a rigorous and informative series of technical assessments, policy analyses, and political discussions that produced a new level of consensus that could dramatically accelerate efforts to use digital innovations to make farming in Africa more productive, profitable, sustainable and inclusive.

The discussions were anchored by the presentation of the Digitalisation of African Agriculture report from the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) and Dalberg Advisors. Its key findings include the fact that some 71 percent of users of digital agriculture or D4Ag services across the continent are under 35. The CTA report found more than 90 percent of the market for digital services that support African smallholders remains untapped and could be worth more than $2.26 billion. The study  also  found nearly 400 different digital agriculture solutions are currently in play, serving 33 million registered farmers across sub-Saharan Africa.

The report estimates the number of registered farmers and the number of digital solutions are growing so rapidly that they are likely to reach the majority of the region’s farmers by 2030.

“Digitalisation can be a game-changer in modernising and transforming Africa’s agriculture, attracting young people to farming and allowing farmers to optimise production while also making them more resilient to climate change”, said Michael Hailu, Director of CTA.

At the AGRF Presidential Summit, moderated by the Rt. Hon. Tony Blair, the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, African leaders discussed the different ways digital technology is becoming a fixture of the African farming landscape.

“When we talk about using digital technology in agriculture, it’s about de-risking the sector,” said Rwanda’s Prime Minister the Rt. Hon. Edouard Ngirente. He said Rwanda is using the new efficiencies available via digital tools to help farmers anticipate the impact of climate change, facilitate business efforts to manage value chains, and create accessible and affordable insurance products—all of which reduce risks associated with agriculture and attract new investors.

“Digital technology is getting easier and easier to manage, especially innovations like mobile payment platforms,” said H.E. Yemi Osinbajo, Vice President of Nigeria “Even the most vulnerable populations are able to use their phones to access  mobile payment systems.”

In a related development, AGRF 2019 featured discussions with senior officials from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to create a new International Digital Council for Food and Agriculture to evaluate the latest advances in D4ag technology and facilitate collaboration among key stakeholders. CTA has noted that a stakeholder alliance is crucial for promoting greater investment, knowledge sharing and partnership building.

Billions in New Investments for Africa’s Digital Infrastructure

There was much discussion at AGRF 2019 about the need for investments in the basic infrastructure and data systems that will provide the critical foundation for D4Ag services. To that end, there was news at AGRF that the World Bank plans to invest US $50 billion in Transforming Africa’s Digital Economy.

The Bank is committed to ensuring every African, including every African business and government, is digitally enabled by 2030. The investments include support for broadband infrastructure; digital skill development; digital platforms; digital financial services; and digital entrepreneurship. One key goal is to double access to broadband services across the continent by 2021.

A New Alliance on Food Trade

The AGRF 2019 featured the launch of the new Africa Regional Food Trade Coalition. The Coalition was developed by a large and diverse coalition of leaders from the public and private sector. They are building on the foundation established by the new African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and market opportunities evidenced in the region’s $35 billion annual food import bill. The goal is to increase regional food trade via more predictable policies and mechanisms that encourage new agribusiness investments that capitalize on the rich diversity of farming ecologies across the continent.

A Regional Food Trade symposium showcased a number of data innovations that could help advance food trade in the region.

SMEs are Big Business in Africa Ag: The “Hidden Middle” Takes Center Stage

AGRF 2019 featured the launch of a provocative new report that busts a major myth of Africa agriculture: that there is a “missing middle” of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) available to power the region’s food systems. AGRA’s 2019 Africa Agricultural Status Report (AASR) presented new evidence that the “missing middle” is actually a “hidden middle” of SME-powered agri-food supply chains that recently has experienced a “quiet revolution.”

The report found that today, millions of SMEs are sourcing directly from millions more smallholder farmers across Sub-Saharan Africa, accounting for 64 percent of the volume of food consumed in the region. The report noted that the rise of SME’s has been largely unrecognized by policymakers, even as it has bridged gaps that previously separated most small-scale farmers from commercial markets.

“SMEs are the biggest investors in building markets for farmers in Africa today, and will likely remain so for the next 10-to-20 years,” said Dr. Agnes Kalibata, President of AGRA. “They were not missing, just hidden.”

Rising to the Challenge of Climate Change Impacts on Food Production

AGRF 2019 closed on the cusp of the launch of a major new initiative from the Global Commission on Adaptation that is expected to feature a significant call to action for new investments and initiatives to help smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa adapt to the impacts of climate change. In support of that effort, the AGRF delegates issued a Declaration on Increasing the Adaptation and Resilience of African Food Systems.

It calls on multilateral, bilateral and private sector partners to support increased funding focused on multiple climate-related challenges to food production in sub-Saharan Africa. Also, delegates committed to embedding resilience and adaptation interventions into national agricultural and investment plans and scaling-up proven technologies targeting smallholder farmers, with a special focus on women and youth.

“We are facing one of the biggest challenges of our time,” said H.E. Hailemariam Desalegn, Former Prime Minister of Ethiopia and the new chair of the AGRF Partners Group and the AGRA Board. “It is a challenge we must own as leaders, policy makers, investors, farmers and business people.”

In a related develop, a coalition of donors and philanthropy, including the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the United Kingdom’s Department of International Development (USAID), the German development agency GIZ, the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR), and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, announced a new initiative aimed at modernizing and sharpening the priorities of public plant breeding in the developing world. The CGIAR’s Crops to End Hunger initiative will provide farmers with a new generation of varieties that will help them adapt to climate change while enhancing the livelihoods of both producers and consumers.

Elwyn Grainger-Jones,Executive Director of the CGIAR System Organization, noted that  CGIAR research centers around the world were committed to working as “one CGIAR” to provide a unified response to the “global climate emergency.”

“We have all heard many times that climate change is a perfect storm for Africa,” he said. “The challenge is to turn political statements into concreate action. This will be a major lift.”

New Home and a New Era for AGRF

Following a competitive bidding process, the AGRF Partners Group unanimously announced that the Republic of Rwanda will host the AGRF 2020 and serve as the long-term home country of the Forum going forward.

AGRF has taken place in eight different countries over the last decade, and will now adjust its approach. It will adopt a “home and away” model where the Forum will alternate between hosting the event in Rwanda in even years and different host countries across the continent in alternate years.

“We are honored to be the home country for AGRF and are committed to working closely and collaboratively with our many partners across Africa and around the world to ensure the continued growth and influence of AGRF as the voice of Africa’s smallholder farmers and agriculture businesses,” said Hon. Minister Geraldine Mukeshimana, Minister of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Rwanda.

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For Media Inquiries Contact:

Waiganjo Njoroge, Interim Head of Communication, AGRA at wnjoroge@agra.org or Tel. No: +254 723 857 270 (Nairobi).

About the AGRF

AGRF is a partnership of institutions that care about Africa’s agriculture transformation. The AGRF Partners Group is made up of a coalition of 23 leading actors in African agriculture all focused on putting farmers at the center of the continent’s growing economies. Partners currently include the African Union Commission (AUC), the African Development Bank, the African Fertilizer and Agribusiness Partnership (AFAP), the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, CGIAR, Corteva, the Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA), the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Grow Africa – a Center of Excellence of the African Union Development Agency (AUDA-NEPAD), the International Development Research Center (IDRC) of Canada, the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Mastercard Foundation, NEPAD Agency, OCP Group, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions (SACAU), Syngenta, the UK Department for International Development (DFID), UPL, the US Agency for International Development (USAID), and Yara International ASA.

AGRA Supports Kenya to Develop and Launch New Agriculture Sector Transformation and Growth Strategy

NAIROBI, Kenya, July 11, 2019:The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) has commended Kenya’s Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Irrigation (MoALFI) for launching  its 10-year Agriculture Sector Transformation and Growth Strategy (ASTGS), which aims to reinforce the position of agriculture as a major driver of economic growth for the country.

The Strategy, unveiled at the 3rd Intergovernmental Agriculture Forum in the Coast City of Mombasa last week, seeks to support the achievement of one of the government’s Big Four agenda – Food security – and will be delivered through nine flagship programmes, informed by sectoral data analysis, global best practices, and local realities.

From the outset, the ASTGS, is designed to increase the opportunities for small scale farmers, pastoralists and fisherfolk by increasing agricultural output and boosting household food resilience.

In this regard, the ASTGS will set up six agro-processing hubs around the country and launch three knowledge and skills building programmes focused on technical and management skills for 200 national and county government transformation leaders, 1000 farmer-facing SMES and 3000 extension agents.

This is in addition to unlocking 50 new large scale farms with 150,000 current farms under sustainable irrigation from existing infrastructure.

“We have made progress in modernizing agriculture in Kenya, but we have not yet reached our full potential. To achieve this potential, we must do agriculture in a different way, from how we create policy at the national level, to how we allocate resources in our farming households,” said Hon. Mwangi Kiunjuri, MoALFI’s cabinet secretary.

“This strategy will be critical in achieving Kenya’s Big 4 agenda especially on food self-sufficiency by 2022,” Added Hon. Kiunjuri.

The ASTGS was based on the understanding that agriculture is a key pillar of the country’s economy, accounting for 33% of total GDP, 60% of informal employment and 60% of the export market.

AGRA’s support to the development of the strategy reaffirms its commitment to working with various partners, private sector and governments to catalyze various interventions that stimulate actions at farmer level in an integrated approach that is also sustainable.

Commending Kenya on this milestone AGRA President Dr. Agnes Kalibata described the ASTGS as an idea whose time has come.

“Together with our partners, we have committed to focus our energies on supporting stronger state capability because we acknowledge its critical role in driving any transformation agenda.  Records show that in countries where state capability has been effective, delivery of results has been registered and progress has been steady with prospects of sustainability,” she said.

For ultimate results, the Strategy will be implemented as a collaborative effort between MoALFI, the County Governments and related ministries, notably: Devolution and ASAL areas; Environment and Forestry; Industry, Trade and Cooperatives; Lands and Physical Planning; Transport, Infrastructure, Housing and Urban Development; Water and Sanitation, and the National Treasury. Various non-state agencies, including AGRA, and private holdings will also play a role in the successful deployment of the Strategy.

In the first five years of execution,the ASGTS will deliver quick wins, based on a structural transformation driven by several legislative processes. An evaluative exercise will be conducted after the five years elapse with the intention of developing innovative interventions for the remainder of the decade.

The newly established Agricultural Transformation Office (ATO) will serve as the national secretariat coordinating the implementation of the strategy at an estimated cost of KSh 440 billion over five years – KSh 230 billion in agriculture-specific costs, and KSh 210 billion in supportive spend.

“With the right approach, up to 80% of costs could be financed through public-private partnerships (PPPs) in the agro-processing and arable land flagships,” reads the Strategy, in part.

“The Government of Kenya (GoK) and its development partners would need to finance the remaining 20%, including incentives, extension, and the enablers. The GoK, therefore, needs to raise an additional KES 8-10 billion per year, approximately 30% more than its current disbursed budgets.”

The ASTGS is set to improve the lives of 3.3 million small-scale farming households (approximately 15 million Kenyans), while contributing an additional annual agricultural GDP of KES 170 billion for the next five years.

The ASTGS was the outcome of several consultative meetings between key stakeholders in the agriculture sector, and was structured around the principles of sustainable development goals, tenets of Agenda 2063, NEPAD/CAADP Malabo commitments and the constitutional obligations of a devolved system of governance.

The Strategy was guided by lessons from the implementation of the Agriculture Sector Development Strategy (ASDS), the overall national policy document that outlined the characteristics, challenges, opportunities, vision, mission, strategic thrusts and interventions needed to propel the agricultural sector forward between 2010 and 2020.

AGRA’s support to the strategy is part of the Partnerships for Inclusive Agricultural Transformation in Africa (PIATA) whose members include the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

For more details, read the full 2019-2029 ASTGS here.

About MoALFI

The Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries is a government ministry in the East African republic of Kenya.  Headquartered in Nairobi, MoALFI, is tasked with the role of maintaining food security for the country through, among other inventions, spearheading the development of appropriate legislation and the provision of extension and research services for both livestock and crops. Read more about MoALFI here.

About AGRA

One of MoALFIs important development partners, the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), is a dynamic, African-led partnership working across the African continent to help the continent’s small-scale farmers and their families lift themselves out of poverty and hunger. AGRA programs develop practical solutions to significantly boost farm productivity and incomes for the poor while safeguarding the environment. The organisation also advocates for policies that support its work across all key aspects of the African agricultural value chain —from seeds, soil health, and water, to markets and agricultural education. For more about AGRA visit www.agra.org or contact the organisation’s Head (ai) of Communications, Waiganjo Njoroge,  through wnjoroge@agra.org or Tel. No: +254 723 857 270