Angola: African Development Bank approves $105-million loan to improve the productivity of smallholdings and reduce food imports

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The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group has approved a loan of $105.19 million to Angola to implement the Agriculture Sector Reform Programme.

The programme is intended to strengthen agriculture policy and the business environment to improve food production and contribute to economic diversification.

The Agriculture Sector Reform Programme aims to make smallholdings more productive and to integrate them into the general economy by improving the policy and regulatory framework to support the operation of agricultural input and product markets. It will enable the government to close the food deficit and reduce food imports,” said the African Development Bank’s Country Office Manager in Angola, Pietro Toigo.

Toigo explained that the project would also deepen reforms, to “move towards more efficient agricultural markets while strengthening the governance and capacity of public agricultural institutions and encouraging the private sector to participate in agricultural markets to help increase Angolan grain and oilseed production.

The programme will support the establishment of an institutional framework to implement national agricultural mechanization and irrigation policies, the agricultural water management plan and the fertilizer law.

The irrigation and mechanization policy will initially consist of developing roadmaps to implement a climate-smart policy and adopt cost-effective climate-smart technologies in agriculture and the food system.

The project will also provide small farmers in four provinces (Lunda Norte, Lunda Sul, Moxico, and Cuando-Cubango) with appropriate machinery and climate-resilient equipment to facilitate routine manual operations and strengthen the adaptive capacity of agricultural systems.

The programme will also support the creation of rural markets and information service centres for farmers in the municipalities, including digital platforms to enable them to access a range of services related to production and to input markets.

The Bank’s support will also help to put in place policy instruments to stabilize cereal production and marketing in times of over- and under-supply.

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