IFC, a member of the
World Bank Group,
signed two grant agreements,
with a combined value of $3.9 million, with the Syngenta Foundation for
Sustainable Agriculture to expand index-based insurance to small-scale farmers
in Kenya, Rwanda and Tanzania. Index-based weather insurance can protect
against the adverse effects of climate change and help to strengthen food security
in rural communities.
The grants were issued by the Global Index Insurance Facility, a multi-donor trust fund financed by the European Union, Japan and the Netherlands and implemented by IFC and the World Bank. It is estimated that the project will bring index insurance to approximately one million small-scale farmers within two years.
At a signing ceremony in Nairobi, smallholder farmer Reuben Biwot from Kitale, Kenya, said, “The insurance has given me confidence. It has transformed my attitude from subsistence farming to farming as a business. I am free from the fear of failure.”
Reuben Biwot is one of 187,000 small-scale farmers in East Africa already
benefiting from index insurance provided by the Syngenta Foundation’s
agricultural index insurance initiative, Kilimo Salama.
Marco Ferroni, Executive Director of the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable
Agriculture, said “The support from IFC and the EU has been instrumental in the
expansion of our index insurance program. This year, our team aims to reach
over 600,000 farmers, expanding the program to cover Tanzania as well.”
Much of the agricultural land in Kenya, Rwanda and Tanzania is rain fed and certain regions are vulnerable to drought and erratic rain. Many smallholder farmers limit their losses to extreme weather by making minimal investments into their land, leading to reduced yields and continued food insecurity.
Traditional indemnity-based agricultural insurance has seen little success due
to high transaction costs and premiums. Index-based insurance, which pays out
benefits on the basis of weather data without costly field verification of
losses, is a more efficient risk management tool.
David Crush, IFC Manager for Access to Finance in Sub-Saharan Africa, said, “Index insurance helps to strengthen the livelihoods of small-scale farmers, which is one of the most important tasks in the quest to fight poverty and foster inclusive and sustainable economic growth in Africa and elsewhere.
A non-profit organization based in Switzerland, the Syngenta Foundation for
Sustainable Agriculture’s mission is to create value for resource-poor small
farmers in developing
countries through innovation in sustainable agriculture and the
activation of value chains. The SFSA’s two-pronged approach to improve
livelihoods is raising agricultural productivity and linking farmers to
markets.
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