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    UK development agency now eyes African warehousing sector with a $ 26 million investment

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    Somali Magazine Nov 3 ,2023– The United Kingdom development fund agency -British International Investment (BII, has committed $26.5 million to the African warehousing sector in Nigeria, Kenya, and Uganda.

    This new investment seeks to support smallholder farmers in storing grains and combat food insecurity.

    The funds will be disbursed to Afex, Africa’s commodities platform, which operates more than 200 warehouses, serving more than 450,000 farmers.

    However, the development fund agency did not say whether investment is in the form of debt or equity.

    The funds will be used to construct 20 modern warehouses in Nigeria, Kenya, and Uganda, scale warehouse technology, and advanced software to capture post-harvest pricing.

    Ayodeji Balogun, Afex-CEO,“This investment from BII is a landmark moment in our mission to revolutionise agriculture and elevate food security across Africa… directing fresh capital towards the development of technologically advanced warehouses and critical facilities, we are significantly enhancing market access and income potential for smallholder farmers.”

    Nick O’Donohoe, BII’s chief executive officer “The World Bank estimates that Africa’s food import bill has reached $30 billion in recent decades. This is why we need to back technology-driven companies like Afex because they help reduce that import cost by supporting smallholder farmers to increase local food production, while also boosting their incomes.”

    Afex was licensed as a warehouse receipt operator in Kenya by the Warehouse Receipt System Council earlier this year.

    Small-scale farmers face many challenges including poor sales from crop harvests, difficult financial outlook due to macroeconomic uncertainty, limited market access and proper storage for produce.

    Poor crop harvests hurt farmers’ incomes as prices of agricultural inputs keep rising under extreme weather.

    The new warehouses are projected to provide 230,000 tonnes of storage capacity, enabling up to 200,000 more farmers to access low-cost storage and maximize sales from crop harvests, potentially helping to increase farmer incomes.

    In a press statement from BII “The investment by BII will also be used to develop a soybean processing plant in Ibadan and a drying facility in Uganda. The construction of the storage facilities and soy processing facilities will generate over 700 temporary jobs and more than 80 permanent roles.”

     

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