Heifer International has announced that it is investing $1 million in the tractor booking platform, Hello Tractor will provide loans for tractor purchases-loans that can be repaid from revenues earned by leasing them to local farmers.

This move is a way of seeking innovative ways to generate agribusiness opportunities for young African entrepreneurs.

The program, “Pay-As-You-Go (PAYG) Tractor Financing for Increased Agricultural Productivity in Nigeria,” already has enabled tractor purchases in Nasarrawa, Abuja and Enugu states.

These purchases could make tractors accessible to thousands of smallholder farmers via the increasingly popular Hello Tractor leasing platform.

Hello Tractor offers software and tracking devices that allow farmers to book tractor services from local tractor owners via a mobile phone app.

“The pay-as-you-go model provides financing for entrepreneurs who want to create jobs by capitalizing on the demand for tractor services on Africa farms, but who lack traditional forms of collateral,” said Adesuwa Ifedi, Senior Vice President of Africa Programs at Heifer International.

She said they have worked since 1944 as an organization, but for 40 years in Africa where it has invested over half a billion dollars supporting critical partners, governments and others in partnership to drive support for smallholder farmers.

“We believe in smallholder farmers’ power, and we know that the power that smallholder farmers hold is not just to pull themselves out of poverty, they know exactly what they need which is an enabling environment for them to unleash what they have.

“So, in 2020, we began to take a second look at this, and we realised that technology will be critical to leapfrog all of the challenges that they (smallholder farmers) are facing, but we also realised that young Africans hold power, and they stand in between technology and agriculture, adaeventsnews gathered.

“What is beautiful about the Hello Tractor model is that they have created what is called Booking Agents, and those Booking Agents know the farmers, they understand where the farmers are, and as a result, they have collateral and the collateral is their history of farmer relationship

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“When we piloted this partnership in the first AYuTe, this year, we are having the second AYuTe, we have used that to learn about the model, so, in 2022 we are going to do a further investment, but we have gone beyond that, we have also set up a program called Tractors for Africa, and our aspiration is to be able to unlock funding for 50,000 tractors”, she noted.

Globally there are roughly 200 tractors per 100 square kilometers of agricultural lands, but in sub-Saharan Africa, there are only about 27. This is illustrative of a mechanisation deficit that has a significant impact on farm productivity and local economies in a region where most people depend on smallholder farming for income.

Hello Tractor is one of many new agritech start-ups emerging across the continent that are finding business opportunities in addressing this and other farming challenges.

Ifedi noted that Heifer International is stepping into the breach to demonstrate the potential of agritech investments to generate jobs for the ten and twelve million young people entering the workforce every year in Africa– and in an economy that, according to the African Development Bank, generates only three million formal jobs annually.

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Ada Grace

Ihesiulo Grace Amarachi AKA Ada Ada, is an accomplished broadcast journalist with over a decade of experience in the industry. Known for her incisive reporting and dynamic on-air presence, Grace has covered major national and international events, from political elections to natural disasters. She holds a degree in Journalism from Ghana institute of Journalism Accra, Ghana. Currently, she serves as the Head of Online Department DailyTimesNGR, State House Corespondent Villa, And is the CEO of Adaeventsnews, where she continues to deliver impactful stories with accuracy and integrity. Off-camera, Grace is an advocate for media literacy and mentors aspiring journalists.

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