Adesina’s agric fund for African youth reaches $600K
African Development Bank
President Akinwumi Adesina’s agripreneur fund to assist the African youth has
increased to $600,000.
Adesina last week after winning
the 2017 World Food Prize in Des Moines, Iowa, said he was dedicating the
$250,000 cash prize to set up a fund fully dedicated to providing financing for
the youth of Africa in agriculture to feed Africa.
Motivated by the 2017 World Food
Prize Laureate’s decision, donors have made additional contributions to the
fund.
“The World Food Prize-Africa Institute will support
young agripreneurs, whom we will call Borlaug-Adesina Fellows. This will allow
us to strategically continue Dr. Norman Borlaug’s legacy of taking agricultural
technologies to the farmers, and my philosophy of promoting and engaging
agriculture as a business,” Adesina announced when he delivered the Laureate
Address at a Luncheon during the World Food Prize-Borlaug Dialogue Symposium on
Friday.
“The Youth of Africa are the
future of the continent and to them I pledge my support.”
To support the 2017 Laureate’s
quest, John M. Harrington III of Sheffield Corporation has matched the prize
money with an additional US $250,000, while John Ruan III, Chairman of the
World Food Prize Foundation, has pledged to contribute US $100,000. This brings
to US $600,000 the amount now available for Adesina’s proposed fund to grow
youth in agriculture and agricultural business.
Adesina praised John M.
Harrington III and John Ruan III for their donations, and for supporting his
desire for a new deal for young African farmers.
In the speech titled “Africa’s
pathway out of poverty, ” Adesina stressed why Africa needs more younger,
educated people in the agriculture sector to succeed.
“They will take agriculture as a
business. They will make agriculture ‘cool’. I fully expect the future
millionaires and billionaires of Africa to come from agriculture,” he said.
The African Development Bank is
accelerating investments to get younger commercial farmers and agribusiness
entrepreneurs into agriculture through a youth in agriculture initiative,
ENABLE Youth (Empowering Novel Agri-Business-Led Employment for Youth).
The Bank will also empower women
and push for greater access to finance for women.
President Adesina is optimistic
that these initiatives will help to lift millions out of poverty in Africa and
into wealth.
“This is my story. My father and
grandfather were farmers, and became so poor farming they had to work as
part-time labourers on other people’s farms. My father told me that farming did
not pay. It was through a benefactor that he made it out of the village to get
the benefit of education,” Adesina said.
“It was that golden opportunity,
with a lot of sacrifices that gave me the benefit of an education and today, by
God’s grace, has given me an incredible opportunity to stand on the global
stage to receive the World Food Prize.”
He stressed the need for Africa
to invest in education across Africa, especially across rural Africa, as the
fastest way to end inter-generational poverty.
On his motivation to feed Africa,
Adesina called it a mission. Like Paul in the Bible, he said, “I also hear the
voices rising out of rural Africa, saying, ‘Come here and help us get out of
poverty.’ This ‘agriculture gospel’ was first preached by Dr. Norman Borlaug,
the Nobel Peace Prize-winner, who created the World Food Prize, for he heard
the voices of a billion people and, through his dedicated work, delivered a
green revolution across Asia that fed a billion people.”
Comments
Post a Comment