Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors

This report provides an update on work that started in 2022 on two inclusive business models supporting agroecological transitioning in Zimbabwe. Agrowth is contracting smallholder sorghum farmers in Mbire district whilst Hamara have introduced the improved Sasso chicken breed to communities in Mure...

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Autores principales: Dawes, Michael, Mushongachiware, Rodney
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163227
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author Dawes, Michael
Mushongachiware, Rodney
author_browse Dawes, Michael
Mushongachiware, Rodney
author_facet Dawes, Michael
Mushongachiware, Rodney
author_sort Dawes, Michael
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This report provides an update on work that started in 2022 on two inclusive business models supporting agroecological transitioning in Zimbabwe. Agrowth is contracting smallholder sorghum farmers in Mbire district whilst Hamara have introduced the improved Sasso chicken breed to communities in Murehwa. The 2023/24 season was characterised by the worst drought in living memory for most. Despite this, both companies are eager to press on because the business cases are still valid, for farmers and companies alike. Both company models were found to be supporting agroecological transitioning in their respective districts. They are aligned to principles such as recycling, input reduction, soil and animal health, synergies, economic diversification, co-creation of knowledge, social values and diets, fairness and connectivity. Access to finance by farmers is problematic – there are few options other than the sale of crops and livestock. In Murehwa savings clubs are vibrant and support poultry production, unlike in Mbire where farmers tend to spend their money on household needs. There are opportunities to use this model to further support production in both areas. Government’s presidential input support programme is also an important safety net for farmers. Continued investment by AE-I will be important, not only because of the past drought, but because farmers and companies alike are upbeat about the interventions, and willing to continue investing in the models. The 2024/25 season is predicted to have above average rainfall, and increased productivity will set the two models on the road to sustainability.
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spelling CGSpace1632272025-02-20T06:25:59Z Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors Dawes, Michael Mushongachiware, Rodney sorghum agroecology transformation value chains markets economic development business models cost benefit analysis livelihoods contract farming This report provides an update on work that started in 2022 on two inclusive business models supporting agroecological transitioning in Zimbabwe. Agrowth is contracting smallholder sorghum farmers in Mbire district whilst Hamara have introduced the improved Sasso chicken breed to communities in Murehwa. The 2023/24 season was characterised by the worst drought in living memory for most. Despite this, both companies are eager to press on because the business cases are still valid, for farmers and companies alike. Both company models were found to be supporting agroecological transitioning in their respective districts. They are aligned to principles such as recycling, input reduction, soil and animal health, synergies, economic diversification, co-creation of knowledge, social values and diets, fairness and connectivity. Access to finance by farmers is problematic – there are few options other than the sale of crops and livestock. In Murehwa savings clubs are vibrant and support poultry production, unlike in Mbire where farmers tend to spend their money on household needs. There are opportunities to use this model to further support production in both areas. Government’s presidential input support programme is also an important safety net for farmers. Continued investment by AE-I will be important, not only because of the past drought, but because farmers and companies alike are upbeat about the interventions, and willing to continue investing in the models. The 2024/25 season is predicted to have above average rainfall, and increased productivity will set the two models on the road to sustainability. 2024-09 2024-12-09T18:10:28Z 2024-12-09T18:10:28Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163227 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Dawes, M., & Mushongachiware, R. (2024). Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors. Montpelier, France: CGIAR System Organization.
spellingShingle sorghum
agroecology
transformation
value chains
markets
economic development
business models
cost benefit analysis
livelihoods
contract farming
Dawes, Michael
Mushongachiware, Rodney
Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title_full Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title_fullStr Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title_full_unstemmed Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title_short Lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
title_sort lessons shared and engagements made with private and public investors
topic sorghum
agroecology
transformation
value chains
markets
economic development
business models
cost benefit analysis
livelihoods
contract farming
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163227
work_keys_str_mv AT dawesmichael lessonssharedandengagementsmadewithprivateandpublicinvestors
AT mushongachiwarerodney lessonssharedandengagementsmadewithprivateandpublicinvestors