By Bob Aston
The 6th African
Green Revolution Forum (AGRF), which concluded on September 9, 2016 at the United Nations
(UN) complex in Nairobi, Kenya, featured Sokopepe among 15 Information and
Communication Technology for Agriculture (ICT4Ag) innovations.
The landmark forum themed:
‘Seize
the Moment: Securing Africa’s Rise through Agricultural Transformation’ aimed
to advance the policies and secure the investments that will ensure a better
life for millions of Africa’s farmers and families.
The open session on “the
digital harvest: How to grow and sustain ICT4Ag solution” reviewed
though a video documentary ICT4Ag Innovations, consumer feedback and steps made
towards sustainability.
Sokopepe director Mr.
James Nguo, was a panelist in the session moderated by Ms. Carol Kyazze
Kakooza, Chief Technical Advisor, and Chief of Party for Geodata for
Agriculture and Water (G4AW)-Market-led, User-owned ICT4Ag Enabled Information
Service (MUIIS), Uganda.
The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)
supported an assessment of the business models of fifteen ICT4Ag solution
providers in Kenya, Tanzania, and Ghana. The fifteen solution providers
volunteered to share their successes and challenges in making ICT work for
smallholder farmers during the forum.
Dr. Agnes Kalibata,AGRA president addressing delegates.PHOTO/AGRF |
The review of Sokopepe
business model by Advantech Ltd indicated that the two year old company is
already 25 percent towards sustainability.
During the session,
policy makers, farmers, private agribusiness firms, financial institutions,
Non-governmental organizations (NGOs), civil society, scientists, and other
stakeholders watched a video of Sokopepe highlighting testimonies from farmers
and value preposition offered by Sokopepe through its Farm
Record Management Information System (FARMIS) innovation.
Mr. Nguo shared the
successes and challenges faced by Sokopepe. He noted that data obtained through
FARMIS would enable agriculture stakeholders such as County governments and
central government, agro-input providers, providers of agriculture credit and
development partners to get evidence of the status of agriculture.
“FARMIS gives farmers holistic year-round
monitoring, data collection, entry, storage, and mid-season analysis to enable
appropriate farm planning and sustainable market linkages,” said Mr. Nguo.
The participants
appreciated the efforts made by Sokopepe in Meru County, Kenya in addressing
lack of accurate production, marketing and operational data in agriculture as
well as limited access to finance by smallholder farmers.
The session reviewed
examples of successful business models as well as how to improve uptake and
usage of ICT4Ag. The panelists also
deliberated on what is hampering ICT4Ag solutions to grow and sustain.
The panelists agreed that
challenges in business models such as lack of clear and unfavourable revenue
models, limited view on cost drivers, and unwillingness by farmers to pay for
services coupled with lack of clear business case for users usually lead to
solutions that do not have robust revenue models.
The delegates concurred
that sustainable ICT4Ag solutions have revenue models, diversified sources of
income, organize regular customer feedback, have copyright protected technology
and key performance indicators to monitor the business among others.
Other featured ICT4Ag
solution providers included WeFarm, VOTO, Esoko, mFarming, iShamba, AGRIinsight, National
Farmers Information Service (NAFIS) , aWhere, Prep-eez, BR Solutions, Mfarms and Ignitia.
The forum realized a
pledge of more than US $30 billion in investments to increase production,
income, and employment for smallholder farmers and local African agriculture
businesses.
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