AfDB |
The President, African Development Bank (AfDB),
Akinwumi Adesina, has announced that the bank has earmarked US$12.5B for
the training of 250,000 Agripreneurs in Nigeria and 24 other African
countries before 2025.
The initiative is part of AfDB´s “Empowering Novel
Agric-Business-Led Employment for Youth in African Agriculture” (ENABLED
Youth) and is aimed at promoting youth entrepreneurship in agriculture
and agro-business. Under this project, US$12.5B will be disbursed to
10,000 youths in each country.
Adesina said, “Under the programme, AfDB will train the next
generation of agriculture entrepreneurs, also referred to as
`Agripreneurs´. The investment required under the ENABLED Youth
programme to provide 10,000 youth agribusinesses per country is
US$500,000M translating to about US$12.5B in 25 countries”. He added
that the enterprise has the potential to create up to five million jobs.
He opined that governments in the continents can develop
agro-business by developing agro-allied industrial zones and staple crop
processing zones in rural areas. “The zones, supported with
consolidated infrastructure, including roads, water and electricity will
drive down the cost of doing business for private food and agribusiness
firms,” he said.
He also explained that such zones will create markets for farmers,
boosting economic opportunities in rural areas, stimulating jobs and
attracting higher domestic and foreign investments into the rural areas,
adding that they will turn the rural areas into zones of economic
prosperity.
Adesina said that `Feed Africa´, one of the bank´s priorities, aims
to transform African agriculture into a globally competitive, inclusive
and business-oriented sector that creates wealth, generates gainful
employment, improves the quality of life and secures the environment.
Eight of the priority investment areas under this strategy are rice
self-sufficiency, cassava intensification, food security in the Sahel,
transformation of the Savannah, revitalisation of tree plantation,
promotion of horticulture, wheat in Africa and fish self-sufficiency.
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