A panel of some of Africa’s most
promising small and medium-enterprise (SME) agri-preneurs 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 (AfDB) organised the virtual
session titled: “Integrating African Food Systems through the Lens of
SME Champions,” recently.
The webinar was moderated by the Bank
Director for agricultural finance and rural development, Atsuko Toda,
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, programs and financing in Africa are
geared toward larger organizations and businesses – and that there is
still 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.
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