UNIDO secures agreement on agribusiness boost for Africa

10/03/2010

High-level representatives from 44 African countries attended a United Nations(UN)-backed conference in Nigeria on March 10 and approved a plan to generate employment, income and food security across the continent through agribusiness.

The scheme provides a framework and financial mechanisms for public and private sectors investors to finance development of the agricultural industry in Africa, including the production of leather and leathergoods.

The UN believes Africa's population could double by 2050 to reach 2 billion people.

Sub-Saharan Africa alone will need $940 billion of cumulative investment over the next 40 years, most of it for agribusiness capital outlays, to feed its people, according to the UN Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO).

“Agribusiness in Africa needs to undergo a profound structural transformation and technological upgrading during the next 20 years to generate jobs and income urgently needed by Africa’s growing population,” said UNIDO Director-General, Kandeh Yumkella, at the conference.

The African Agribusiness and Agro-industries Development Initiative, or 3ADI, was attended by 500 participants, including heads of State, prime ministers and ministers of agriculture and industry. It was organised by UNIDO, with the African Union (AU), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), and the African Development Bank.

“It is essential to avoid policies, such as subsidies on labour-saving technologies, that bias technology choice in favour of large-scale, highly mechanised operations,” stressed Mr Yumkella.

He underscored the importance of developing agribusiness on a regional and continent-wide level, adding that private enterprises had to be stimulated, technology and innovation expanded, innovative financing mechanisms introduced, infrastructure and energy constraints removed.

“For agribusiness to become competitive, policies need to be in place, as well as research and practical actions to achieve a blend of ecological compliance and inclusive growth,” he said.

African states have pledged to invest through the AU a minimum of 10% of budgetary resources in the agricultural sector, and the Group of Eight industrialized countries (G-8) conference in Italy last year renewed the donor community commitment to the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme, which has set an annual agricultural growth target of 6% to achieve the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of halving poverty by 2015.

In a related development, UNIDO and Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETI), a leading pan-African banking group, signed an agreement to work together in promoting economic growth in Africa, particularly in the area of agribusiness, including food, leather, textiles, wood, agro-machinery; on renewable energy, including bio-energy initiatives, on hydro power projects, and other environmentally sustainable projects; as well as on clean technologies.