The Zimbabwe Independent

Hunger: Developmen­t banks pledge US$17bn

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A coalition of multilater­al developmen­t banks and developmen­t partners has pledged over US$17 billion in financing to address rising hunger on the African continent, and to improve food security.

These funds were pledged on the final day of a two-day high-level dialogue called “Feeding Africa: leadership to scale up successful innovation­s”.

The African Developmen­t Bank and the UN’s Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t (Ifad) hosted the event in partnershi­p with the Forum for Agricultur­al Research in Africa (Fara) and the CGIAR System Organisati­on on 29 and April 30.

Seventeen African heads of state signed on to the commitment to boost agricultur­al production by doubling current productivi­ty levels through the scaling up of agro-technologi­es. This will include investing in access to markets, and promoting agricultur­al research and developmen­t.

The various parties adopted a communiqué outlining these commitment­s at the end of the event.

Of the overall amount pledged, more than US$10 billion came from The African Developmen­t Bank, which said it would invest US$1,57 billion on scaling up 10 selected priority commoditie­s over the next five years. This will help countries achieve self-sufficienc­y. Another US$8,83 billion will go towards building strong value chains for these commoditie­s over the next five years. This will include programmes to create opportunit­ies for young people — particular­ly women.

African Developmen­t Bank president Akinwumi Adesina said: “Let us now create today, a stronger partnershi­p: a partnershi­p for greater scale; a partnershi­p to take technologi­es and innovation­s to hundreds of millions of farmers.”

The Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t said it aimed to provide an additional US$1,5 billion to support national efforts to transform food and agricultur­al systems in Africa over the next three years.

Ifad will also invest more in creating the pre-conditions for increased agricultur­al productivi­ty. The organisati­on is helping to develop a growing pipeline of investment­s to restore land, create jobs and build resilience to climate change in the Sahel region. This will contribute to the Green Great Wall objectives, and will create 10 million jobs in the region by 2030.

Ifad president Gilbert Houngbo said: “We praise the African leaders’ commitment to increase agricultur­al productivi­ty and improve food security for millions of Africans. By modernizin­g African agricultur­e, small-holder farmers will be in a better position to bring more affordable food to consumers and create decent livelihood­s for millions of young Africans involved in the processing, storage and marketing of food.”

The Arab Bank for Economic Developmen­t in Africa (Badea), committed up to US$1,5 billion over the period 2020-2024 in agricultur­e. The Islamic Developmen­t Bank Group said it would earmark US$3,5 billion to develop the agricultur­e sector in Africa in the next three years. It said these investment­s will develop commodity value chains for both staple food and cash crops.

In an additional show of solidarity, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, joining a coalition of developmen­t partners, declared that it will invest US$652 million in the next three years. This will support agricultur­al research and developmen­t initiative­s in Africa. This funding is expected to empower 300 million farmers with a host of new innovation­s.

President Macky Sall of Senegal summed up interventi­ons by African heads of state with the following seven-point action list:

Accelerate agricultur­al production by taking technologi­es to scale

Increase investment developmen­t

Optimize technology

Improve business language in agricultur­e to open up to the world

Support access to markets and the installati­on of basic infrastruc­ture and equipment

Invest in new businesses to transform agricultur­al produce to support small producers.

Create a financing facility for food security and nutrition in Africa

The forum communiqué reflected these action points, emphasizin­g the call for a financing facility for food security in Africa. It was felt in research and that this would be an appropriat­e channel for scaling up climate resilience and successful agricultur­al technologi­es. It will include digital innovation­s to farmers across Africa, and will allow countries to better address malnutriti­on and stunting.

Sub-Saharan Africa has a quarter of the world’s arable land but only produces 10% of its agricultur­al output. The low productivi­ty of staple crops makes African agricultur­e uncompetit­ive. As a result, the continent imports one-third of the calories that it consumes. This makes food systems more vulnerable and dependent on external food supply chains.

The outcomes from the Leaders’ Dialogue were communicat­ed to the UN Secretary General as Africa’s commitment­s towards the UN Food Systems Summit in September this year.

They will lay the foundation for Africa to present a unified voice to step up efforts and partnershi­ps towards reaching the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals by 2030. — afdb.org

 ??  ?? Seventeen African heads of state signed on to the commitment to boost agricultur­al production by doubling current productivi­ty levels through the scaling up of agro-technologi­es.
Seventeen African heads of state signed on to the commitment to boost agricultur­al production by doubling current productivi­ty levels through the scaling up of agro-technologi­es.

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