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Using ICT to integrate smallholder farmers into agricultural value chains: The case of DrumNet in Kenya

Using ICT to integrate smallholder farmers into agricultural value chains: The case of DrumNet in Kenya. Julius J. Okello, Edith Ofwona-Adera and Oliver L.E Mbatia Paper presented at IAAE eARN Africa Symposium, Beijing, August 19, 2009. University of Nairobi.

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Using ICT to integrate smallholder farmers into agricultural value chains: The case of DrumNet in Kenya

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  1. Using ICT to integrate smallholder farmers into agricultural value chains: The case of DrumNet in Kenya Julius J. Okello, Edith Ofwona-Adera and Oliver L.E Mbatia Paper presented at IAAE eARN Africa Symposium, Beijing, August 19, 2009 University of Nairobi

  2. Smallholder farmers continue to experience difficulties being linked to markets in Africa Most of them face poorly functioning input markets/failed market for essential inputs, e.g., Credit (& certified seeds) Information Technical advice Smallholders and market linkage

  3. Small farmers are also not able to integrate into better paying output markets Output markets fail for such farmers because they are: Widely scattered hence high assembly costs Many and poorly organized Tend to trade in small volumes These factors make it costly to do business with small farmers. Worsened by lack of market information Smallholder farmers and market linkage contd…

  4. Small farmers’ market place Typical volumes traded by most smallholder farmers in Africa

  5. Input markets fail for smallholder farmers Output markets also fail. And are: Fragmented Offer poor prices Are thin (only handles small volumes) Relational transactions – personal exchange Hence smallholders are poorly linked to both input and output market Poor market linkage contributing to the low-equilibrium poverty trap low investment, low harvests, low marketable surplus, …. What’s the point?

  6. The DrumNet intervention aimed at resolving the constraints small farmers face by: Linking them to input markets (provision of credit) Linking them to ready and better paying output markets (includes transportation) Technical advice (information) Players in the value chain are linked through a mobile phone-based platform The DrumNet Intervention

  7. Overview of the DRUMNET intervention • Provides a high-demand set of business support services to about 2000 resource-poor farmers in rural Kenya. • Targets sunflower producers in western Kenya (see location). • Three sets of business support services are provided — marketing, finance, and information as an integrated package. • Key actors in the sunflower value chain include:– farmer groups, transaction agents, produce buyers, input suppliers, financial organizations and agricultural extension workers - all are interconnected using ICTs. • This presentation looks at the effects/impact of the DrumNet intervention in smallholder sunflower production in Kenya

  8. Finance Processors 3% 9% Transporter Market & Other Fees Exporters 65% Small Plot Farmers Farmgate Brokers Local Brokers Central Brokers Large Retailers Large Institutions Value Chain Before DrumNet Before DrumNet Source: baseline research 23%

  9. The model creates efficiencies and allows participants to enter markets Farmer Groups Bank Stockist BUYER • Buyers access predictable supplies of produce without significant field mobilization • Disintermediation of traditional brokers, resellers, and traders • Farmer Input Suppliers alerted to upcoming Farmer demand for products • Full transparency and market data for all participants • Banks shielded from complexity of managing large number of farm input loans • Repayment risks reduced with connection to produce payments • Farmers grow under structured contracts with Buyers • Transaction agents/group leaders (use cell phones within the value chain) • All financial transaction occur on cashless basis

  10. DrumNet Flow • Membership • FGs become DrumNet members • Fill Membership form • Pay DrumNet Membership fee • Partnerships • Buyer • Farmer Intermediary Organizations (FIOs) • Farmer Groups (FGs) • Banks • Agro Suppliers • System Input • Partner & FG data get input in the system • SMS generated by the system acknowledging receipt of fee • Training • FGs get trained on • DrumNet model • Crop Agronomy • System E-Token • System sends E-token to FGs to pick inputs from agro-dealers E-Token: 382764 Seed:10kg DAP:500kg • FGs pick inputs from Stockist • Stockist uses DrumNet procedures/tools • Stockist gets paid cash or by Bank transfer against FGs loans Planting FGs plants & takes care of their plots based of the Crop Agronomy training received

  11. DrumNet Flow • Harvest Projections • Buyer gets projections on expected yields • Field Audit • Pre-scheduled messages to FGs from DrumNet system • Produce Collection • Produce aggregated from FGs and collected at DrumNet Collection Points • Buyer Receives produce • Buyer receives produce, weighs and grades • Buyer makes payment to DrumNet Lockbox • Deductions & Payment • Deduct Principal & Interest • Deduct DrumNet Fees • Net payments transferred to FG bank accounts

  12. Finance Processors 3% 9% Transporter Market & Other Fees Exporters 65% Small Plot Farmers Farmgate Brokers Local Brokers Central Brokers Large Retailers Large Institutions Comparison of the two value chains…..Before & …After Before DrumNet Finance After DrumNet Processors 9% Transporter 23% Exporters 86% Small Plot Farmers Market & Other Fees Large Retailers 5% Large Institutions

  13. Other benefits of DrumNet intervention: household food security How much food did you borrow? (kg) How much food did you donate?(kg)

  14. Other benefits of DrumNet intervention: income and medicare Income (Kshs) Access to medicare (% of farmers)

  15. More Benefits • Systems approach: • Linkages to agricultural value chain actors not previously accessible to farmers • Use of mobile phones for business as an emerging area (Lessons of Experience) • Influence on policy & institutional practices: • Lessons from DrumNet have informed a Ministry of Agriculture program - Kilimo Biashara - in partnership with Equity Bank – IFAD –AGRA. • Equity bank has expanded its financial products to include lending to rural farmers

  16. Some Challenges • Rate of farmer participation still low and reaching scale elusive • Tonnage and yield per acre below MOA recommended levels • Sustainability- Need for further costs reduction across the supply chain (DrumNet is migratory due to strategic default by farmers) • Adoption of SMS technology still low with Farmer Group Leaders (30% adoption)

  17. Side selling and diversion of inputs by Farmers Strategic default – farmers borrow with intention of not paying back Fuelled by poor coordination and monitoring of farmers Reliance on rain-fed agriculture – easy for farmers to blame weather for failure to pay Despite the above challenges , some encouraging outcomes have been realized Challenges contd..

  18. The Future - Built On IDRC’s Initial Support Re-defining the ICT functionalities Offer bundled services to DrumNet partners Products & Services facilitation Finance Market Information Transaction Brokering Transportation Coordination Payment Processing Savings Product Farming Techniques Web Hosting Advertising Transportation Farm Inputs Pricing Farm Input Brokering Cash Advance Farm Input Credit Financial Planning Market Reports Communication Product Aggregation Marketing Group Support Crop Insurance Credit Ratings Newsletter

  19. Conclusion • Linking smallholder farmers in the agricultural value chain requires an integrated intervention that fosters linkage with • Input providers • Buyers • Other services providers • Reducing the length of the value chain and integrating ICTs facilitates this linkage. • It also has other benefits • Household food security • Household income • However there are challenges that require careful monitoring of input use and well coordinated produce pickup.

  20. Thank You!

  21. Project area

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