Seed Business Management in Africa

Seed Business Management in Africa
Title Seed Business Management in Africa PDF eBook
Author J. MacRobert
Publisher CIMMYT
Total Pages 256
Release 2009
Genre Food crops
ISBN 9290592540

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Seed Business Management in Africa

Seed Business Management in Africa
Title Seed Business Management in Africa PDF eBook
Author
Publisher CIMMYT
Total Pages 256
Release
Genre
ISBN

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Seed Business in Africa

Seed Business in Africa
Title Seed Business in Africa PDF eBook
Author
Publisher CIMMYT
Total Pages 256
Release
Genre
ISBN

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Seed Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa

Seed Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa
Title Seed Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa PDF eBook
Author Venkatachalam Venkatesan
Publisher World Bank Publications
Total Pages 130
Release 1994-01-01
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 9780821330869

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World Bank Discussion Paper No. 266. Seed production and distribution are important factors in determining the pace of agricultural development. For a seed system to be effective, it must satisfy the different requirements of each crop. Presently

African Seed Enterprises

African Seed Enterprises
Title African Seed Enterprises PDF eBook
Author Paul van Mele
Publisher CABI
Total Pages 236
Release 2011
Genre Science
ISBN 9781845938444

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In most developing countries, good quality seed is hard to obtain and farmers struggle to save seed from one year to the next. This title takes a people-centred look at the companies, public agencies and family farms that are taking on this role and making a difference to food security across Africa.

Growing Smartly

Growing Smartly
Title Growing Smartly PDF eBook
Author Sara Boettiger
Publisher
Total Pages
Release 1915-01-28
Genre
ISBN 9780692242766

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Growing Smartly addresses a question the international development community has asked for many years: how do we scale up the adoption of technologies among the poor? The book focuses on agricultural technologies, and seed in particular, discussing the challenges of scaling seed systems in sub-Saharan Africa.

An Investors’ Guide to Africa’s Emerging Seed Markets

An Investors’ Guide to Africa’s Emerging Seed Markets
Title An Investors’ Guide to Africa’s Emerging Seed Markets PDF eBook
Author Flo Dirks
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 2023
Genre
ISBN

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Fragmented market intelligence is the major barrier to investment in Africa’s emerging seed markets, according to participants in our June 23rd conference session on An investor guide for Africa. There is significant demand for a service of assessing the attractiveness of emerging seed markets in Africa for (impact) investment. The service should go beyond collating relevant information from diverse sources, by interpreting it and making informed recommendations to (impact) investors. We intend for our report to offer a substantiated value proposition for an entrepreneur or institution interested in prototyping and anchoring this service. We do this with the view to increase intelligence on Africa’s emerging seed markets. This report shares what Wageningen Centre for Development Innovation has uncovered through research about seed market intelligence in Africa. The research has been conducted mostly online involving literature review, key informant interviews with 20 leaders in government, industry, science, and civil society and panel discussion about the actual intelligence and minimum viable product for a service they require in making investment decisions. Among them were respondents from: the African Union Commission; the regional economic community COMESA; national, regional, and multinational seed companies; development finance institutes and commercial lenders; international agricultural research institutes, other knowledge institutes, and consultants; the African Seed Trade Association (AFSTA); and an International NGO. The research revealed several useful platforms, indices, and reports offering data for indicators of relevance to investors. Sources of market intelligence for the entire African region are included in the report. However, each does not cover all countries and dimensions of interest. We assessed 12 of them and learned that The African Seed Access Index (TASAI), Access to Seeds Index of the World Benchmarking Alliance, and Enabling the Business of Agriculture index of the World Bank overlap in 17 countries where data from CAADP Biennial Reviews are also available. These countries across Western and Central, and Eastern and Southern Africa offer the most readily available information for making investment decisions. Our research also resulted in the convergence of multiple indicators around four categories. This includes those that assess: (i.) seed sector performance; (ii.) the potential absorption of crop harvests in outputs markets; (iii.) current progress against targets for development impact; and (iv.) other variables of the country context. Cascading from that level of aggregation are three topics (sub-categories) in each. For the seed sector these include indicators of seed demand, seed supply and seed regulatory function. For output markets these include the size or value of these markets, the level of investments made in farm productivity, and organization of producers in leveraging economies of scale. For impact these include different indicators of poverty reduction, food security and nutrition, and climate change adaptation and mitigation and biodiversity conservation, management, and use. And lastly, for country context these include demographics, political and economic stability, and infrastructure. A mosaic of data is available from the indices and other sources of information mentioned above. Important to our efforts to collate these data are their availability in the public domain. Our research offers a substantiated value proposition and minimum viable product for the service. What it falls short of doing is outlining a viable business model for anchoring this service in the seed sector. Should an entrepreneur or institution be interested to pilot the service in Africa, we advise that they thoroughly consider the business model, including partnerships and revenue streams. A critical resource (and cost in the model) includes expertise on seed, seed business, and/or seed systems. Without this knowledge, based on our determination of the minimum viable product, accurate interpretations of the data cannot be made reliably. Collation is not enough to inform investment decisions and (impact) investors are looking for qualitative recommendations as well. We offer some cues for the curation of these data.