RWANDA – The African Development Bank (AfDB) has awarded a US$1.1 million grant to Rwanda to implement the country’s Meat Value Chain Trade Competitiveness Project.

The Board of Directors of AfDB approved the grant which will help to expand the east African nation’s meat production value chain, enhance market access and cross border trade and increase the contribution of the sector to the Rwandan economy, highlighted the banks press-release.

The grant is awarded from the resources of the African Trade Fund (AfTRA).

AfTra is a technical assistance fund with the primary goal of improving trade performance in African countries. Its specific goals are to modernise customs systems, develop competitive projects, enter new markets and build institutional capacity for supporting trade.

The Meat Value Chain Trade Competitiveness Project, to be implemented between September 2020 and August 2022, targets provinces such as Rubavu, Nyagatare, Bugesera (Gako) and Rusizi districts.

It will directly benefit more than 650 producers, processors and merchants, 74% of whom are women working in informal cross-border trade.

In addition, it will indirectly impact 1,950 producers, processors, merchants, and customs agents, as well as 1,560 community animal health agents, 416 area veterinarians, 30 district veterinary agents and 20 veterinary agents from the Rwandan Office of Agricultural Development.

Abattoirs in Koadu, Camr, Rugano, Rugari, Santra and Saban will also be supported.

The project covers two of Rwanda’s busiest cross-border trade frontiers where large trucks haul goods between Gisenyi and Goma in the Rubavu district, and “Rusizi I,” connecting Kamembe to Bukavu in the Rusizi district.

The value chain trade competitiveness project will complement the “Gako Beef” initiative, a flagship livestock and meat production scheme started by the Rwandan government in 2015 to increase meat production for local markets and for export.

As of the end of February 2020, AfDB’s active portfolio in Rwanda involved 25 operations, amounting to a total commitment of US$1.8 billion, with infrastructure development (energy, water and sanitation, and transport) accounting for 79.15% of the projects.

The other sectors are skills improvement and social development (2.48%), and the private sector (9.99%).

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