By Bob Aston
The Laikipia Produce and Marketing
Co-operative Society is in the process of receiving village aggregation Centre
certification from the Eastern Africa Grain
Council (EAGC). The certification is part of the support provided by EAGC
towards ensuring that the cooperative succeeds as a Grain Business Hub (GBH) which
is being supported by SNV-
Netherlands Development Organization.
A GBH is a business characterized by
amalgamation of supportive businesses/services linked to grain business that
enables an organization to trade in grains efficiently, effectively and
sustainably; and ensures grain suppliers (farmers) access goods and services
through check-off system.
It functions as a collective of
supportive businesses and services that help the production activities of
member farmers. It does this through managing the collection, distribution, and
marketing of food products, mainly grains, from farmers and, also, other
non-members.
Speaking while touring the
cooperative store on May 4, 2015, Mr. Fred Simon Otieno, Program Officer, EAGC
Structured Trading Systems noted that the GBH has brought together different
partners in the grain value chain.
Maize being sun dried |
He said that they are currently on a
profiling and ranking exercise to help determine the marketing potential of the
cooperative and identify gaps that can be supported by the different
development partners engaged with the cooperative. He said that EAGC will train
the cooperative on Warehouse Receipting System (WRS), post-harvest handling and
value addition of grains.
The certified village aggregation Centre
will work under the GBH. It will enable the cooperative to buy cereals in bulk
from members and then distribute and sell them to schools and other structured
markets.
“As a certified village aggregation Centre
the cooperative will be able to store grains to a standard required by most
structured markets,” said Mr. Otieno.
The Procurement Governance for Home
Grown School Feeding (PG-HGSF) which SNV has been implementing has been
developing and expanding the GBH model, an initiative that further strengthens
the linkages and capacities smallholder farmers have to school feeding.
“EAGC has been supporting grain aggregation,
information sharing and market linkages. We will support the cooperative as a
grain business hub as we have seen that you have a huge potential,” said Mr.
Otieno.
He urged the cooperative to safeguard
their assets through insurance and also to ensure that basic post-harvest
handling equipment’s are procured.
EAGC is a membership organization of
the grain stakeholders in Eastern Africa. The stakeholders represent the three
main sectors of the grain value chain including traders, farmers and
processors.
The Laikipia Produce and Marketing
cooperative society emerged from the work undertaken by Arid Lands Information Network (ALIN) through
Ng’arua Maarifa Centre with the support of the Ford Foundation’s Expanding
Livelihoods for Poor Households Initiative (ELOPHI). It is a vehicle for
bulking, marketing and trading in farm commodities and other products and
services.
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