6 Youths Win AfDB’s $120,000 AgricPitch Prize
Six African youths including three from Nigeria have won African Development Bank’s $120,000 prize for the AgricPitch competition.
The founder of a cassava processing business in Kenya, a co-founder of a novel food processing technology start-up, and the owner of a smallholder farmer food procurement company in Nigeria won the top cash prizes in the competition on Tuesday, the bank announced.
The AgriPitch competition offered young entrepreneurs in Africa’s agricultural sector the opportunity to pitch their agribusiness proposals to a panel of experts and investors who selected winners in “early start-up,” “mature start-up” and “women-empowered businesses” categories.
“I was so excited when I heard my name [called],” said Elizabeth Gikebe, founder of Mhogo Foods in Kenya, who won the women-empowered businesses category $20,000 prize.
Gikebe says she entered Mhogo Foods – a company that adds value to cassava production by processing the tubers into gluten-free flour, cassava snacks and animal feeds – into the competition in 2018 and again in 2019 without success.
She says she’s glad she didn’t give up. “With a lot of persistence, you can get what you are looking for. It showed me that everything has its time,” Gikebe said.
Apart from Gikebe, other winners are Femi Aiki, Foodlocker, Nigeria ($40,000); Noel N’guessan, Lono, Côte d’Ivoire ($20,000); Oluwaseun Sangoleye, Baby Grubz, Nigeria ($10,000); Ikenna Nzewi, Releaf, Nigeria ($20,000) and David Matsiko, Bringo Fresh, Uganda ($10,000).
Held virtually, AgriPitch saw more than 2,500 applications and 605 proposals from 30 countries shortlisted down to 25 finalists from 12 countries. The finalists qualified for a two-week business development boot camp, and then a select top nine AgriPitch competitors made their final pitches to an online panel of judges and investors.
“To be chosen from such a qualified list of businesses is always exciting,” said
Ikenna Nzewi, the early start-up category winner, representing Releaf, a food pre-processing technology company.
Started by Nigerian-American graduates from MIT, Yale, and Duke universities who set up shop in Uyo, Nigeria. Releaf plans to save the $20,000 competition prize for future
investment.
“We are very confident about the work that we are doing to catalyze industrialization in food processing. It is excellent to see the African Development Bank with its High 5s focus – one of them being industrialization – to also be supporting us,” Nzewi added.
Daily Trust