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Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund

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Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund

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    1. Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund André Dellevoet Executive Manager AECF

    2. Presentation Outline What is the AECF Aims and Objectives of the AECF Making market systems work How the AECF works Progress to date Project examples Financial value chain Partnership with investors

    3. What is the AECF? AECF is a high profile initiative, arising from the Commission for Africa report (2006) AECF is a fund of donor money available to the private sector on a competitive basis AECF is a special partnership initiative of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). AGRA is chaired by Kofi Annan and funded by Rockefeller and Bill and Melinda Gates AECF is funded by a multi-donor consortium (DFID, Dutch, Ausaid, DANIDA, SIDA, IFAD). The donors form the Governing Council of the AECF. Final decisions are made by an Independent Investment Committee It is managed by a KPMG led team (the Fund Manager). Other partners include Triple Line Consulting, Springfield Center, Creative Squares, and Y&R Current capital is US$140m

    4. Aims and Objectives of the AECF The Goal of the AECF is to accelerate pro-poor growth in Africa – increasing employment, livelihood opportunities, income and reducing poverty The purpose of the AECF is to make market systems work better for the poor in rural areas in Africa By impacting on market systems we aim to have a positive impact (jobs and incomes) on large numbers of people living in rural areas The AECF works by supporting private sector companies to develop and test new and innovative business ideas in agri-business, rural financial services and renewable energy/adaptation in Africa

    5. Making market systems work Challenge is to select projects that will have a positive impact on the business and a direct impact on poor people and will make a systemic change to the way the market operates Such projects are likely to be motivated by business objectives and are also innovative Ideally we seek “disruptive” innovation that impacts on the way other players in the market behave AECF as social venture capital

    6. How the AECF works The AECF manages a series of competitions, open only to for-profit-companies for innovative projects in Africa. Best bids win We have open competitions and focused sectoral and geographic windows The AECF provides grants and repayable grants from a minimum of US$250,000 up to a maximum of US$1.5m per project (the average grant/loan size is around US$750,000) Companies have to at least match the funds provided by the AECF (in fact 3x as much) AECF funds are provided on a reimbursement basis unless otherwise agreed

    7. AECF Performance Lead partner or engagement quality control KPMG INSTRUCTOR- Ask participants: “What are some of the questions we might ask as we develop our proposal strategy (what are the considerations)?” Suggested responses: What is the issue or opportunity? What are the firm’s key competitive differentiators? What is the client willing to spend? What are the resource requirements for this engagement? Identify Proposal Team & Potential Engagement Resources -The prospective Engagement Partner should identify a team to lead the proposal effort. This team typically includes the Prospective Engagement Manager and any key subject matter professionals (Senior Associates, Associates, Manager, etc). The engagement team members may be proposed at this stage, but they are usually not formally scheduled until after an Engagement Letter is signed by the client. In selecting resources for the engagement, the Proposal Team will consider each of the following items: Client Experience – Select individuals who have had successful projects with the client in the past. Service Line Experience – While it is important to have experienced service line professionals on the engagement team, it is also important to put together a diverse team with varying and complimentary backgrounds. Regulatory Experience – Each engagement team should have an understanding of the client’s current regulatory environment. Industry Experience – Consider using resources who have experience working in the client’s industry. Time- 3-4 minutes Lead partner or engagement quality control KPMG INSTRUCTOR- Ask participants: “What are some of the questions we might ask as we develop our proposal strategy (what are the considerations)?” Suggested responses: What is the issue or opportunity? What are the firm’s key competitive differentiators? What is the client willing to spend? What are the resource requirements for this engagement? Identify Proposal Team & Potential Engagement Resources -The prospective Engagement Partner should identify a team to lead the proposal effort. This team typically includes the Prospective Engagement Manager and any key subject matter professionals (Senior Associates, Associates, Manager, etc). The engagement team members may be proposed at this stage, but they are usually not formally scheduled until after an Engagement Letter is signed by the client. In selecting resources for the engagement, the Proposal Team will consider each of the following items: Client Experience – Select individuals who have had successful projects with the client in the past. Service Line Experience – While it is important to have experienced service line professionals on the engagement team, it is also important to put together a diverse team with varying and complimentary backgrounds. Regulatory Experience – Each engagement team should have an understanding of the client’s current regulatory environment. Industry Experience – Consider using resources who have experience working in the client’s industry. Time- 3-4 minutes

    8. Progress to date 89 projects in 17 countries US$66.80m committed (US$31.58m grant, US$35.22m repayable) US$242.26m matching funds committed by businesses Estimated 3 million rural people will benefit from these projects Progress to date has been excellent and all targets have been exceeded

    9. Projects being Implemented Projects include: Rural finance project in Nigeria with Monitise plc Smallholder Sorghum production with Guinness in Northern Cameroon Maize value chain project in Ghana with Yara International Smallholder Cocoa quality and export project in Sierra Leone with Biolands ltd Cotton smallholder business in Kenya with Rift Valley Products Limited Pigeon Pea development and processing project in Tanzania with Export Trading Company

    10. AECF leverage AECF funding mobilizes commercial capital for the grantees in various ways. Example Kencor, Zimbabwe, received loan from Tetrad investment bank + Stanbic bank to finance working capital. Example Virtual City, Kenya (automated dairy supply chain management). Received funding from Acumen Fund. See barchart.

    12. Trickle down effect of AECF capital AECF grants are used to provide credit and inputs to smallholder farmers, supplemented by the business own financing. Example; Ghana Grain Partnership, Ghana. Used the AECF Grant to provide inputs and credit to 400 smallholders. Stanbic provided a loan to expand the scale of the project. Example: Progene Seeds, Zimbabwe. Used the AECF grant to provide credit to ± 2000 farmers to produce seeds.

    13. Financial value chain: new partnerships

    14. Partnership with investors Win-win; pipeline development for investors, exit strategy for AECF 3 options: joint, parallel or subsequent; Mostly debt (joint) or equity (parallel and subsequent) Announcement of partnership prior to competition; confidentiality clause; Harmonization of procedures under joint financing; Some cost sharing and finders fee charged; 5 partnerships under preparation

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