Call for Proposals: Sustainable Inclusive Value Chains and Food Fortification


25 February 2016. Brussels. EU public information session on the launch of two calls for proposals with a combined value of €57 million with the objective of developing inclusive and sustainable agriculture-based value chains (Lot 1) and fortified foods (Lot 2) that improve food security for the poor and vulnerable and that reduce poverty and under-nutrition. 
  1. Lot 1 specifically focuses on smallholder farmers and micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) agribusinesses in developing countries as final beneficiaries by increasing income opportunities, creating jobs and business opportunities along the agricultural supply chains in an inclusive and sustainable manner.
    Lot 1 – Value Chains (S.O. 1 & 2):  EUR 27 million.
  2. Lot 2 aims to strengthen the production, diffusion and consumption of accessible technologically viable and culturally acceptable fortified food, compliant with national and international standards. It will involve working with government and intergovernmental regulatory bodies, the food processing private sector operators and civil society, reinforcing public-private partnerships.
    Lot 2 – Food Fortification (S.O. 3): EUR 30 million
    Background:
    1. This call was launched on 12 February and is open until 29 March 2016.
    2. In order to be eligible for a grant, the lead applicant must be among one of the following eligible countries in LDCs and other low income countries from Africa (see however the full list in the Guidelines for grant applicants.docx)(c) Least developed countries (LDC) : Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Sao Tome & Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia
      (d) Other low income countries: Kenya, Zimbabwe
    3. Any requested EU contribution (amount) under this call for proposals must fall between the following minimum and maximum amounts:

      Lot 1 – Value chains:

      • minimum amount: EUR 3 million

      • maximum amount: EUR 7 million

      Lot 2 – Food fortification:

      • minimum amount: EUR 1 million

      • maximum amount: EUR 4 million
    4. Full details of the call are available here
    5. A public information session about these calls, lasting more than one hour, took place on 25 February 2016. 
    6. The video of the session is available here. "Probably a total number of 9 projects will be funded under this call": Regis Meritan (DG DevCo European Commission)
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    Coming soon: The first ‘youth in agribusiness’ web TV in Africa!

    Agribusiness tv ok 600Sharing youth in agribusiness challenges and successes

    In recent years, individuals and organisations have been advocating more strongly for the increased engagement of African youth in agriculture. With an ageing farming population, high youth unemployment and development of innovations in the sector, agriculture could potentially provide greater employment opportunities for young people. However, in order to encourage more youth to be actively engaged in the sector, agriculture has to be made more attractive, and stories of young people successfully participating along the agricultural value chain need to be valorised and shared.

    Seeing is believing

    There is nothing more convincing than actually seeing youth successfully engaged in agriculture for others to become involved or to be encouraged to take the first steps. On this basis, the initiative Agribusiness TV will focus on youth agricultural entrepreneurship initiatives in Africa and will be the first web television (also known as web TV). Initiated by MediaProd, a company specialised in communication for agricultural and rural development, the project is supported by CTA.

    Featuring youth interviews, testimonials and stories from the field, Agribusiness TV will address the following questions: How did these young people achieve success in agribusiness? What were the key factors which made their business idea work? What were the challenges faced and how did they manage to overcome them? What is the current status of youth in agribusiness in Africa, particularly in each of the various countries of focus? Where are the opportunities and how to seize them?

    How it works and what to expect?

    Agribusiness TV will be launched as a web and mobile application featuring young women and men under 40 years engaged in agribusiness in any segment of the agricultural value chain. The videos will focus on key commodities identified by regional economic organisations (ECOWAS, CEMAC, etc.) and in regional agricultural policy documents, as well as regional trade endeavours. Youth already involved in or interested in agribusiness are the primary target audience for the videos with individuals and organisations supporting youth in agricultural entrepreneurship also targeted.

    The project will initially feature quality video reports from four countries in Western and Central Africa: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon and Cote d’Ivoire, although other countries will also be covered to some extent. Other relevant videos produced by partners or other stakeholders will be identified, selected and shared through the web TV.

    The team and expected launch

    The team behind Agribusiness TV is a group of young African video journalists and agricultural specialists who have worked in the agricultural sector for many years and have a good knowledge of youth in agriculture. An inception workshop will be held during 7-11 February 2016 in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, which will involve the Agribusiness TV team meeting to fine-tune and finalise their work plan for the first phase of the project. Following this workshop, it is expected that the web TV will be officially launched by April 2016.

    For more information or to get featured, contact MediaProd at:

    Email: agribusiness.tv@gmail.com
    Twitter: @AgribusinessTV
    Telephone: +226 60 04 23 23

    The Agribusiness WebTV initiative is one of the projects selected in 2015 in the framework of the CTA Youth Call for Proposals, launched in the framework of the Agriculture, Rural Development and Youth in the Information Society (ARDYIS) Project.

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    Launch of the Fish Farming AgriHack in West Africa

    New innovations continue to revolutionise the way we carry out fish farming. In an increasingly digital world, mobile solutions are also being called upon to tackle some of the challenges that the sector faces.

    In line with this, the Youth-Enabled Fish Farming AgriHack (YEFFA) project was selected last year by CTA following the launch of its Youth call for proposals. The objective of the project is to use information technology to help solve challenges in the fish farming value chains in Nigeria, Benin and Togo. The initiative is led by Wennovation Hub (an ICT innovation centre in Nigeria) in collaboration with e-triLabs and Woelab (ICT innovation centres in Benin and Togo respectively) and the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND).

    YEFFA is an adaptation of the AgriHack Talent Initiative that CTA has been championing, which aims to support ICT innovations and entrepreneurship in agriculture by youth up to 35 years old.

    For more information please here http://bit.ly/fish-agrihack

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    Innovative and Inclusive finance for youth in agriculture (Report)

    Within the framework of the 2015 Africa Agriculture Status Report developed by the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) in collaboration with partners including CTA, which focused on "Youth in agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa", CTA contributed two chapters on: "Innovative and Inclusive Finance for Youth in Agriculture" and "ICT and Youth in Agriculture" to the report.

    The chapter on “Innovative and inclusive finance for youth in agriculture” focused on analysing youth access to credit, savings, insurance or other forms of financing to promote their entrepreneurship drive.

    It starts with a brief review of the challenges preventing young agripreneurs from accessing needed finance. It went further to assess the current state of financing available to youth in agriculture, observing that financing youth in agriculture is already happening.

    Besides, where African youth have had this financing opportunity, they have found innovative and creative strategies to secure a future for themselves while contributing to the development of the private sector and social stability in their countries. However, because young people often have fewer assets to use as collaterals, there is still a considerable gap in their access finance especially through formal institutions, thus financing of youth in agriculture needs to be scaled up.

    Authors summarized their analyses and recommendations into five key points indicated below:

    • Links between young entrepreneurs in agriculture and formal financial institutions need to be strengthened by improving youth’s financial literacy and the capability of institutions to assess agricultural sector opportunities.
    • Better metrics can drive better policy – African governments should produce and share reliable statistics on youth employment in agriculture and their financial inclusion.
    • Young agripreneurs, having fewer assets, will benefit from forms of finance that do not require fixed collateral, such as contract farming, leasing, warehouse receipt finance or factoring. Governments and international development organizations should encourage such forms of finance through blending and guarantee schemes.
    • Crowdfunding platforms offer opportunities to young African entrepreneurs, including in agriculture, and governments should remove all barriers that prevent them from operating properly, including for equity and loan financing.
    • A scarcity of venture capital firms (including the mentoring services that they provide) hampers African young entrepreneurs, including in agriculture, in developing and scaling up their businesses. Development organizations should continue to scale up their support for challenge funds and impact investing to fill this critical gap in the market.

    Leveraging on these recommendations can help governments and development organisations working with young people in agriculture to facilitate increased youth engagement in agriculture and unleash their entrepreneurship drive.

    Authors of the Chapter:
    Lamon Rutten and Sehomi Landry Fanou

    Download the chapter here

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    ICT and Youth in Agriculture in Africa (Report)

    Within the framework of the 2015 Africa Agriculture Status Report developed by the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) in collaboration with partners including CTA, which focused on Youth in agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa, CTA contributed a chapter on: "ICT and Youth in Agriculture" and "Innovative and Inclusive Finance for Youth in Agriculture" to the report. The objective of the chapter on “ICT and Youth in Agriculture” was to examine the role ICTs are playing in supporting youth engagement in agriculture in Africa, and to explore the current status, usages and emerging trends.

    Furthermore, it attempted to highlight the key challenges and opportunities for Africa’s youth in agriculture and make recommendations to policy makers and other stakeholders on how to foster increased involvement of young people in agriculture.

    While African youth have shown insufficient interest in agriculture, and their engagement have not been sufficiently supported, the emerging trend of applying ICT solutions to agriculture are attracting an increasing number of youth (back) to agriculture. These young people often bring their energy, creativity and tech-savviness to agriculture and are changing its landscape in Africa.

    This is being done through various initiatives, such as better integrating ICTs in record keeping, promoting agriculture among other youth via social media platforms, creating virtual markets that help farmers/agripreneurs connect to markets more easily and get better prices, developing ICT applications for agricultural value chains. Youth are helping to advance new agricultural ICT-enabled practices, such as e-extension and precision agriculture. The inclusion of ICTs is gradually generating additional livelihood opportunities for them and strengthening their engagement with the sector.

    Young people are, however, constrained by a host of factors, including the relatively high cost of access to ICTs, inadequate capacity, unreliable connectivity, weak (but improving) integration of ICTs into the agricultural value chains, and limited access to finance for their activities.

    ICT uses analysed in this report build on the framework of engaging youth in agriculture through ICTs developed by the CTA ARDYIS project.

    Examples of initiatives analysed include those implemented by stakeholders such as IICD, YPARD, IFAD, the Rwandan Ministry of Youth and ICTs (MYICT), Agri-ProFocus.

    Key recommendations include:

    • Facilitate affordable access to ICTs for young farmers
    • Support ICT for agricultural research, innovation and youth entrepreneurship
    • Develop digital literacy programs for young farmers and agripreneurs
    • Strengthen ICT incorporation into agricultural curricula
    • Support the sharing of success stories on ICT and youth in agriculture
    Authors also recommend that increasing ICT use and equipment in agricultural institutions, as well as promoting the development and implementation of sound e-agriculture strategies. This will better develop youth uses and innovations and benefit all stakeholders.

    Authors of the Chapter: Ken Lohento and Oluwabunmi Ajilore.


    Download the chapter here http://bit.ly/youth-ICT-Agri-report.
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