• Thursday, December 19, 2024
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IFAD partners Babban Gona to boost private funding for smallholder farmers

NEPC to train South-East farmers on good agricultural practices

As part of its broader efforts in addressing rising hunger and poverty level’s in the poorest countries of the world, the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) has today launched the Private Sector Financing Programme (PSFP) to boost private funding for smallholder farmers and agribusinesses.

As part of its launch, the PFSP announced its first loan of $5 million to a Nigerian social impact enterprise, Babban Gona, which has a strong background in successfully moving smallholder farmers from subsistence to a more market-orientated model.

Previously, IFAD only channelled investments to rural areas through grants and sovereign loans to governments. IFAD’s loan to Babban Gona is IFAD’s first loan to a private sector entity.

“We can end poverty and hunger! But to achieve this, we urgently need to stimulate more private sector investments to rural areas and unlock the immense entrepreneurial potential of millions of rural SMEs and small producers,” said Gilbert F. Houngbo, President of IFAD in a statement.

“With access to capital, they can attract more investors and partners, grow their businesses, and create employment opportunities – especially for young people and women,” Houngbo said.

Read also: FG, Japan support 150 farmers with rice inputs in Edo

According to Babban Gona, the loan will help the organisation support 377,000 small-scale rice and maize producers in Nigeria with a comprehensive package of training, quality inputs, and marketing services.

Also, Babban Gona will also store and sell the harvest on behalf of its farmers when prices are higher. The aim is to create up to 65,000 jobs for women and 66,500 jobs for youth by 2025.

By committing these funds, the PSFP aims to stimulate larger contributions from other investors and help Babban Gona meets its target to raise $150 million to reach millions of small producers.

Lack of financing and access to financial services prevents rural SMEs and small-scale farmers from harnessing opportunities offered by a growing demand for more diverse and nutritious food globally.

SMEs involved in food processing, packaging, transport, and marketing are essential to small-scale farmers, providing them with services, inputs, and market opportunities, which contribute to increasing their income and employment.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, financial service providers only met about 30 percent of the $240 billion that rural households required in their demands for finance. In addition, the lending gap to agricultural SMEs was around $100 billion annually in Sub-Saharan Africa alone.

IFAD aims to mobilise $200 million for the PSFP from public, private and philanthropic sources to leverage a total of $1 billion in private investments.

This will improve the lives of up to 5 million small-scale farmers. The PSFP will focus its investments on job creation, women’s empowerment, building farmers’ resilience, and accelerating climate change mitigation.

“With growing hunger and poverty and the urgent need to make our food systems more sustainable and equitable, business as usual is not an option. We need to innovate now,” Houngbo said.

“This is why IFAD is creating new instruments to catalyse increased private sector investments to rural areas where they are needed most,” he added.

IFAD’s investments, combined with its 40 years of experience working with rural communities, global field presence, and large portfolio in agriculture, give it an advantage in attracting private investors who may be cautious about investing in agriculture and rural economies.

The PSFP is part of IFAD’s wider ambition to increase its engagement with the private sector to reach millions of more rural people and double its impact on eradicating hunger and poverty by 2030. To this end, in 2019 IFAD amended its funding agreement to enable it to invest directly in private sector entities.

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