The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a US$22.33 million concessional loan to the Republic of Malawi to finance the country's Agricultural Infrastructure and Youth in Agribusiness Project.
The project will develop two large scale irrigation schemes at Linga (Nkhata-Bay) and Dwambazi (Nkhotakota) in the central region of the country. It covers 1,945 hectares and targets 10,000 beneficiaries with special focus on the youth who constitute about 50% of the beneficiaries.
It aims to use irrigation infrastructure as an enabler for scaling up the production of a number of crops including maize, rice, sugar and horticulture products and enhancing value addition through processing within the context of the Malawi Growth and Development Strategy (MGDS) which identifies agriculture and food security, irrigation and green belt initiatives as drivers of economic growth.
The overall objective of the project is poverty alleviation to be achieved through improved rural livelihoods and income generation for the beneficiaries, and enhanced food security. By expanding opportunities in agriculture and agribusiness among the rural youth, the project will ensure inclusive growth. The project is transformative and will promote exports and import substitution through improved value addition and processing.
Apart from mitigating the challenges arising from dependency on rain-fed production the project will promote youth entrepreneurship through improved access to credit from Micro Finance Institutions. It is estimated that within four and half years the project will produce a large number of Agripreneurs and train artisans for the maintenance of irrigation infrastructure, as well as launch new agribusinesses, which are expected to generate employment for about 4,600 people, with the majority being women.
The African Development Fund's (ADF) concessional US$ 22.33 million loan represents 83 percent of the project's funding. The EU will provide a grant of US$ 2.23 million, while the government and beneficiaries will contribute the remaining US $ 2.46 million).