AFEX’s currently creating wealthy farmers, boosting investments — Balogun// Best
AFEX’s currently creating wealthy farmers,
boosting investments — Balogun
By Gabriel Ewepu In this interview,
the Chief Executive Officer, AFEX Commodities Exchange Limited, Ayodeji
Balogun, disclosed efforts made by his company in creating wealthy farmers in
Nigeria and boosting investments along various value chains in the last five
years, as he speaks on other salient issues in the agricultural sector.
Excerpts: Can you give a brief
background of AFEX Commodities Exchange Market? AFEX has been operating in
Nigeria since 2014, and so we have a 5-year history and legacy of being able to
provide storage and collateral management for commodities using world-class
processes but also top-tier talent that manages the base itself. Over the past
5 years, AFEX has built over 60 warehouses across Nigeria. We pride ourselves
on the largest network of commercial storage services and as a licensed
commodities exchange and warehouse receipt system operator, we also have the
warehouse receipt system and collateral management that gives the market
confidence.
Five years into doing business, and
building the ancillary infrastructure necessary to support trade and manage
risk in the sector, we are now focused on offering up our infrastructure as a
service to various players and enabling the larger capital market to tap into
the activities in the commodities market with ease. Essentially, we are
building a technology-driven capital market infrastructure, which will unlock
alternative investment capital to finance tradable low-risk agriculture and
other commodity types. Why is AFEX focusing on agric commodities? We began our
operations with agriculture commodities because it’s a huge and important
problem. Farmers live in a vicious poverty cycle primarily because they are
financially excluded. They remain cut off from the formal economy, and almost
all their assets exist in cash or near cash. This prevents wealth creation,
especially, in an inflationary economy, and results in the continued reality of
smallholder farmers, who produce over 90 per cent of food in Africa, remaining
the poorest and most under-served group in Africa’s economy. The commodity
exchange model provides the infrastructure for fairer and more transparent
trade by offering up its platform as a shared resource for key groups of people
to participate in. When a transparent and fair market system that determines what
the true value of commodities are, which essentially covers the role of a
commodities exchange, it helps to promote investments, it helps with
transparency, and it helps with an equitable distribution of value across the
system. We, however, fully intend to expand to other commodity value chains
keeping an eye on where we can have the most impact alongside the creation of
value for all our stakeholders.
What has been the impact of AFEX on farmers’ profitability? In AFEX’s experience working with farmers across the country over the past five years, when a farmer can access loans and a bundle of products and services (farm input, education, micro-insurance, storage as a service etc), he increases his income by 400 per cent over three years, achieving over $2,000 in savings. When a farmer gets trained on the right agronomic practices, and has access to credit for two consecutive seasons, their yield increases by up to 100 per cent, and their house hold savings increases by about 200 per cent after covering baseline costs. By the third year, they have enough cash to buy or lease a second plot. They cultivate their primary plot with their savings and then plant the new field based on proceeds from the loans.
By the third harvest, their savings typically
increase by over 400 per cent. How many Nigerian farmers have so far benefited
from this your Commodities Exchange Market? We have 113,000 farmers directly
and over 200,000 farmers indirectly. With the rise in food prices, what do
farmers stand to gain from your commodities exchange market? Our value
proposition to farmers has always been two-fold: access to finance and access
to markets, which are two huge problems that smallholder farmers in Nigeria
have historically been unable to surmount. By engaging with the Exchange,
farmers will be able to gain access to finance in form of inputs like
fertilizers, seeds, and crop protection products while also being enabled to
access support in terms of extension services that impart knowledge on good
agronomic services. At the end of the season, the farmers can also access
larger markets through the Exchange as their products can be aggregated with
that of other smallholder farmers and furnish the orders of Exchange clients on
the processor side. This process is a transparent one where farmers can get
information on prices and determine for themselves when to sell considering
that our storage infrastructure also allows the farmer to store their produce
in AFEX warehouses which have certain quality parameters that ensure that the
grains retain their value. What do you think the government should do to reduce
food prices? Agriculture planning is always in the mid to long term, and
reducing food prices is a matter of ensuring that our supply is able to meet up
with the demand for food. We have always advocated for a data-led strategy that
will enable us to track these early. Data needs to be available and today it is
not available at a scale that we need as a country. When it is, policymakers
will need to be able to then make informed decisions around it, and so we need
a data-strategy for agriculture in place which will enable adequate planning
both for policy at the government level and advocacy and execution for active
players in the sector. We also need to amplify dry season farming to ensure
that we are expanding our crop output. CBN is already driving this, but more
stakeholders need to be involved. How have your warehouses impacted in tackling
post-harvest losses? We have about 45 warehouses across 15 states in the
country and these warehouses are open and provide storage as a service for the
farmers meaning that instead of a farmer to rent warehouses or keep his grains
in his house, where he will lose 20 – 30 per cent of the volume over time, you
have a situation where you can bring it into a warehouse and he can pay for the
three bags he is storing for 3 months and he stores it. So, it is stored as a
service and then takes off the burden and the risk of storage off the farmer.
What is your sustainability plan in keeping your relationship with farmer
groups, cooperatives, and communities? We are staying focused on farmer
engagement; using our outreach structure to get more farmers to take advantage
of the Exchange’s offerings from input financing to storage and grading
services. We don’t see our relationship with the farmers as transactional we
see it as a community we are building, and so trust is central to that system,
but so is ensuring that they see much needed value in the bundle of services
that we are providing for them and are able to record growth year-on-year. With
the impact of the current economic recession that has occasioned
hyperinflation, do you have plans to cushion the effects on farmers under your
purview in terms of farm input and transportation of their produce? We already
have a process in place via our outreach structure, which allowed us to profile
farmers and include them in our systems after which we disbursed loans in form
of inputs and actively provided support for them through the production cycle
up to harvest when we are now triggering our repayment structures, but also
enabling the farmers to get access to a market for their leftover commodities.
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