Sunday Okobi with agency report
As project sponsors, borrowers, lenders and investors
gathered at the Africa Investment Forum to make deals on investment
opportunities, leaders of the continent’s top agribusiness companies shared
their thoughts on the future of the industry.
With its vast agricultural potential, Africa’s agribusiness
sector is predicted to reach US$1 trillion by 2030. Agribusiness will become
the ‘new oil” on the continent, African Investment Forum participants said,
fueling the motor of inclusive growth.
Agribusiness will become the ‘new oil” on the continent,
African Investment Forum participants said.
The African Development Bank Vice President for Agriculture,
Human and Social Development, Jennifer Blanke, said: “Agriculture is a key
priority for the African Development Bank, through our Feed Africa strategy.
“Understand that by transforming Africa’s agriculture sector
it will become the engine that drives Africa’s economic transformation through
increased income, better jobs higher on the value chain, improved nutrition,
and so on,” she said in her opening remarks at an Africa Investment Forum
session titled, Agribusiness: investment conversation with industry leaders.
Some agribusiness leaders said there is a need to invest
US$45 billion per year to harness the power of agriculture and move up the
value chain to create jobs and wealth.
At present, only US$7 billion is invested in the sector.
Investments from the private sector, leaders said, will create the adequate
environment and enhance the emergence of locally owned agro-processing
industries, capable of creating jobs and increasing incomes in rural Africa.
The continent could
become a net exporter of agricultural commodities, replacing US$110 billion
worth of imports, as well as doubling its share of market value for select
processed commodities.
The full-capacity session was a highlight of the Africa
Investment Forum, organised by the African Development Bank. The event brought
representatives from multilateral financial institutions, pension funds,
sovereign wealth funds, government officials and private investors to
Johannesburg, South Africa for three days.
Participants in the agribusiness session discussed the
industry’s entire value chain. Leading the ‘fireside chat’ was a roundtable of
experts that included Aliko Dangote, President and CEO of the Dangote Group;
Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, Minister of Finance of Nigeria; William Asiko, CEO, Grow
Africa; John George Coumantaros, Chairman, Flour Mills of Nigeria and TP
Nchocho, CEO, Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa
“We need to do the research to produce the right solutions
to the issues we might face along the value chain. Youth are particularly
involved in this aspect as they know how to develop tools addressing issues
such as water management and release”, said Aliko Dangote.
Agribusiness can also promote industrialisation and urban
employment, break the ‘productivity gap’ of development, and improve the
quality of life for all Africans. Attendees said Africa’s agricultural
potential needs to be unlocked.
Session participants said they want to bring African
agriculture to the next level. For the small and medium scale farmers, the main
challenge remains access to finance. Zainab Shamsuna, Nigeria’s Minister of
Finance urged investors and development partners to adapt their policies to
accommodate more participants in the agriculture value chain,
“I want us to eat what we grow and consume what we produce”,
Shamsuna said.
In closing the session, Manager of Agribusiness Development
at the African Development Bank, Edward Mabaya, highlighted the vast investment
opportunities in Africa’s agribusiness including seed, fertilizer,
mechanization, processing and storage.
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