GHANA – The UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) has partnered Grow For Me (GFM), an innovative Ghanaian company managing a digital agricultural financing platform, to provide capacity building, access to finance and market, and channel diaspora investments to finance youth and women farmers in Ashanti and Western regions.

The partnership funded by the European Union Trust Fund for Africa (EUTF) under the GrEEn project in Ghana, will leverage on UNCDF’s technical assistance and GFM’s business model.

GFM enables anyone to participate in farming and commodities trading digitally by connecting investors to farmers, and aggregators in need of financing through their web and USSD-based crowdfunding platform.

Arianna Gasparri, UNCDF Technical Specialist, said, “GFM is bringing on board an innovative service that will unlock these opportunities and we look forward to seeing its success for thousands of young farmers and aggregators.

“Through the European Union Emergency Trust Fund for Africa (EUTF), GFM will have the opportunity to intentionally target youth and women in the Ashanti and Western regions in Ghana.”

The partnership aims to reach 2,000 farmers and unlock funding from key diaspora corridors. It falls under the strategic UNCDF approach of Inclusive Digital Economies that aims to leverage digital transformation and technology to leave no one behind.

Nana Opoku Ware Ofori Agyemang-Prempeh, the Chief Executive Officer, Grow For Me, said, “The partnership with the GrEEn Project is perfectly aligned with our core vision and mandate of making food affordable and accessible to all.

“With over 30 per cent post-harvest losses in Africa, there is a need to scale our platform into other regions in Ghana and take those learnings into new markets such as Kenya and Nigeria, to mention a few. This will enable our continent to deal with the food scarcity problem at the farm gate.”

He commended the EU and UNCDF, for funding them to expand their operations to Ashanti and Western regions and enable farmers to find a ready market for their harvest through financing from Africans in the diaspora.

By 2030, the agricultural industry in Africa will be valued at US$ 1 trillion however, access to finance and markets remains a big challenge.

Also, many farmers experience huge post-harvest losses due to a lack of ready markets to buy their harvest and storage facilities like warehouses.

These challenges limit their capacity to grow, expand and become economically independent.

UNCDF is working to address these problems through a partnership with Grow For Me, spearheading innovation through crowdfunding as mandated by the European Union.

Ophelia Ama Oni, UNCDF’s Digital Financial Service Expert, Skills and Innovation, said “GFM’s innovative crowdfunding model offered to the Ghanaian diaspora the opportunity to invest in a farm or trade commodities while providing much-needed finance and capacity building for farmers.”

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