AfDB webinar: African SME champions proffer investment solutions

A panel of some of Africa’s most promising small and medium-enterprise agripreneurs gathered online to call for more selective investment, accelerated business acquisitions and increased cooperation to help Africa feed itself and the world.

The African Development Bank organised the virtual session, ‘Integrating African Food Systems through the Lens of SME Champions,’ as a side-event ahead of Africa’s largest agriculture conference – the African Green Revolution Forum – which is being held online for the first time, from 8-11 September.

Webinar moderator, Atsuko Toda, AfDB’s director for agricultural finance and rural development, said the panel members, were selected because they are using innovative solutions, tailored their business models, have a proven track record, and shown to have an impact on food systems.

“We see the importance of the roles that you play, the risks you take and the bank wants to give you more visibility so that policy makers can understand the challenges of what you are facing and help SME champions to grow,” Toda said.

The group of African ‘SME Champions’ – heads of SMEs across the continent’s food system production, processing, logistics, agricultural digitisation and cold storage chain solutions sub-sectors, set the scene for webinar attendees, by describing the challenges and opportunities they face in trying to meet Africa’s food systems demands.

Some said policy, programmes and financing in Africa were geared toward larger organisations and businesses with “too heavy” a focus on agricultural imports to Africa.

“Especially if you are an SME it is really challenging to penetrate the market and do something significant,” said Nicholas Alexandre, Global Head of Commercial at LORI, a Kenya-based tech-driven logistics company.

Others shared their experiences in overcoming challenges.

For example, Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu, the head of Nigeria-based ColdHubs, said his solar power, cold storage facility company helps farmers’ produce stay fresher, longer, reducing the need to rush product to market at less competitive prices.

ColdHubs added that it invested in the storage infrastructure, so that farmers could benefit from the service at a reasonable price.

“We are taking the risk out of ownership of huge cold rooms from smallholder farmers because we design, operate and maintain these cold rooms. We offer a pay-as-you-use service model,” said Ikegwounu.

Kenya’s SunCulture company, which provides farmers with solar-powered irrigation services, also uses a similar “pay-as-you-grow” service fee programme.

SunCulture CEO and ‘SME Champion,’ Samir Ibrahim, told webinar attendees that there had been sufficient development and investment support to African entrepreneurs to know what works – and that it is time to step up scaling up efforts.

“We know that there are proven solutions, the focus now should be to target finance and partnerships to scale those.

“We need donors and multilaterals to start cutting much bigger checks for much fewer interventions…so we can see the needle moving,” Ibrahim said.

Other champions said building up Africa’s agriculture sector lay in building up its agriculture value chains.

‘SME Champion’ Patricia Zoundi, who started up Canaan Land, a Cote d’Ivoire-based company that trains women in rural areas in order to develop sustainable and inclusive agriculture said, “We have north-north cooperation. We have south-south cooperation. Now it is time to have SME-to-SME cooperation…On this panel, I see three SMEs with which I can collaborate in marketing…[they offer] something I need in my value chain.”

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