To create a sustainable food system, we need to
cultivate young farmers. Supporting beginning farmers needs
to be a collaborative effort—one that connects young people with both
financial and technical resources and provides the knowledge necessary
to develop a successful business. New farmers also need sustainable
funding and mutual partnerships with investors, which are increasingly
found outside of traditional investment models. And MAURITIUS is no exception to this strategy if we want to be food secure, less reliant of food imports. The following websites gives a glimpse of the various initiatives that are being taken in the US to bring in the youth in agriculture.
“When starting a business, it is very important to have
accurate information that feeds into your business plan,” says
beginning farmer Dan Berube. “Expectations are everything in life.
Many beginning farmers are coming from families that haven't farmed
for a few generations now, so it is hard for them to know what they
are getting themselves into.”
Researchers from Tufts University note that new farmers
are more likely to face financial hardships than veteran farmers.
Beginning farmers lack access to land, capital, and
established marketplaces for their products. Moreover, new farmers
often lack the technical expertise and business knowledge needed to
run a successful farm.
Fortunately, food incubators and accelerator programs can
offer business support from industry experts, technical assistance,
introductions to markets, mentoring, and training, thereby helping new
and existing farmers to overcome barriers to entering farming. These
initiatives help beginning farmers to launch new businesses, expand
existing operations, and increase their incomes.
Food Tank is highlighting 30 resources available
for producers who are working to create food sovereignty and
sustainable farm business models, ranging from food and farm
incubators to sources of grant money and microloans:
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ACDI/VOCA—a
private, nonprofit organization—envisions a world in which empowered
people can succeed in the global economy. To achieve this vision,
ACDI/VOCA promotes “economic opportunities for cooperatives,
enterprises, and communities through the innovative application of
sound business practice.” Programs specific to agriculture include Farmer-to-Farmer,
the Cooperative
Development Program II (CDPII), and implementation of the U.S.
Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Feed
the Future.
AgDevCo
is a social impact investor and agribusiness project developer that
aids in the financing of sustainable agricultural business
opportunities in Africa. Additionally, AgDevCo supports the
development of agriculture-supporting infrastructure, such as
irrigation and bulk storage. Once commercially viable, AgDevCo
transfers the businesses to primarily national ownership and then
reinvests funds in other early-stage agriculture development
projects.
AgriBusiness
Incubator (ABI) at International Crops Research Institute for the
Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), founded in 2003 in India, promotes
agricultural technologies developed by ICRISAT and other research and
development institutions. ICRISAT focuses on five strategic areas:
seeds, biofuels, ventures to develop particular innovations (products
or services), farming (high-value crops), and agricultural
biotechnology. Additional outreach strategy includes collaborative
business incubation.
AgroEcology
Fund is a “collaboration of donors working to coordinate and
sustain agricultural systems that build on the existing skills and
practices of local farming communities.” The Fund awards grant money
to eligible projects; in 2012, the AgroEcology Fund awarded US$1
million to six partners for a two-year grant period. Supported by an
advisory board of global experts, the Fund is currently working on its
second round of grantmaking.
Center
for Environmental Farming Systems (CEFS) Incubator Farm Project
understands that access to land is one of the biggest obstacles new
farmers face. To address this problem, CEFS works with communities in
North Carolina to repurpose land into new farm incubators. These
farmers “pay” for their land with services to the community and fresh
farm products. Participants also have access to training and technical
assistance opportunities in farm business and production.
Consortium
for Enhancing University Responsiveness to Agribusiness Development
Limited (CURAD) is one of six agribusiness innovation incubator
programs in Africa aimed at generating jobs and boosting incomes
within the agricultural sector. CURAD’s target clients include student
startups, as well as small and medium wholesale and retail, coffee
processing, and agribusiness enterprises.
Dirt
Works, an incubator farm in South Carolina, provides farmers
launching a new business with infrastructure and support for up to
three years. For a minimal fee, participants receive acreage, access
to a tractor, packing facility, walk-in cooler, tool storage,
irrigation, and assistance from a mentor farmer. After farmers’ three
years are up, Dirt Works helps match these farmers with prospective
land on which to expand businesses.
FamilyFarmed
works to increase the production, marketing, and distribution of food
that is produced locally and justly. To achieve this goal,
FamilyFarmed offers trainings in farming, wholesale success, and food
safety; provides access to food hubs; helps expand markets for farmers
and food artisans; brings together financing
and innovation partners at its Good Food Conferences; and offers a
Business
Accelerator program that provides selected fellows with mentoring,
support, and access to capital.
Farm
Aid helps build a family-farm-focused agricultural system through
a variety of resources. The online Farmer
Resource Network allows farmers to “access new markets, transition
to more sustainable and profitable farming practices, and survive
natural disasters." The Grant
for Family Farm Agriculture program provides family farm
organizations from across the country with grants ranging from
US$500–US$20,000 annually.
Food
and Farm Communications Fund (FFCF) facilitates the strategic
communication needed to create robust and resilient regional food
systems. FFCF offers grants to a variety of programs, which the
organization assesses for viability in market strategy and
communications. Funding ranges from US$10,000–US$100,000.
Food+Tech
Connect is an online platform for good food innovators that uses
technology and data to improve the food system. Through resources like
its weekly newsletters, Food+Tech Connect helps to launch, grow, and
transform companies committed to revolutionizing the food system.
Additionally, Food+Tech Meetups and Hackathons discuss and undertake
“some of the food industry’s greatest challenges.”
Food-X
helps companies tackling major challenges that affect the food sector
through mentorship and education. During three-and-a-half-month
programs, as many as 12 businesses meet in Food-X’s New York City
office and receive intensive business mentorship from experienced
entrepreneurs. Additionally, Food-X provides companies with US$50,000
to support them during this training and beyond.
Grameen
Bank has developed a new type of banking. Instead of traditional
monetary deposits and other forms of collateral, the bank relies on
accountability, mutual trust, creativity, and participation to provide
credit to the poorest Bangladeshis. Grameen Bank uses a small-scale
microcredit lending program (usually providing a few hundred U.S.
dollars) to small enterprises in a variety of industries, including
agriculture. Loans are only available to the poor, with a focus on
women.
GlobalGiving
is a charity fundraising site that provides a fundraising platform for
social entrepreneurs and nonprofit organizations from all over the
world. Donors can search for different projects—focusing on causes
such as education, feeding the hungry, building houses, training women
with job skills, and many more meaningful objectives—to make
contributions. Since its creation in 2002, GlobalGiving has over
USD$184 million to help support close to 13,000 projects.
Global
Greengrants Fund has provided over USD$45 million in grants to
people, foundations, and businesses supporting community-based
projects that aim to make the world safer, healthier, and more just.
These grants have addressed pressing issues—including biodiversity,
climate change, energy and mining, food and agriculture, fresh water,
sustainable livelihoods, marine and coastal conservation, and youth
leadership—in 163 countries.
Headwaters
Farm Incubator Program leases out sections of Oregon’s East
Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District’s (EMSWCD) land to
individuals looking to launch a new farming endeavor. Headwaters Farm
hopes to develop qualified, experienced young farmers to reverse the
trend of the aging farming population while also keeping good farmland
in production and adding to the diversity of the “farmscape."
Hot
Bread Kitchen, located in New York City, offers two culinary
workforces and business incubation programs, Project Launch and HBK
Incubates. These initiatives give low-income men and women access to
the food industry. Hot Bread Kitchen encourages immigrants in the
incubation programs to provide recipes for “multi-ethnic” bread. The
organization uses the recipes for training and sells the unique bread
at retail and farmers market locations.
Institute
for Sustainable Development (ISD) promotes ecological agriculture
based on local inputs and improved natural resources management in
Ethiopia. The organization works to raise crop yields for local food
security and improve ecosystem services for farmers, their families,
and local communities. Initiatives include soil fertility enhancement
(compost), push-pull technology, agroforestry, supporting innovative
farmers, and adapting to the effects of climate change.
La
Cocina is an incubator kitchen based in San Francisco, CA.
Focusing mainly on women from immigrant and minority communities, La
Cocina aids in breaking down barriers—such as high cost of entry, fees
for licensing and insurance, and availability of kitchen space—by
providing commercial kitchen space and technical assistance to
low-income women launching, growing, and formalizing food
businesses.
National
Sustainable Agriculture Coalition Beginning Farmer and Rancher
Development Program (BFRDP) is the only federally funded program
dedicated exclusively to training the next generation of farmers and
ranchers. BFRDP awards grants to academic institutions, state
extension services, producer groups, and community organizations to
support and train new farmers and ranchers across the United
States.
National
Young Farmers Coalition works to secure the success of young
farmers by supporting practices and policies that enable new farmers
to create thriving businesses. The Coalition offers a variety of
resources that help farmers overcome barriers and create strong,
prosperous farming operations, including connecting farmers with land
and jobs, training
opportunities, a guide to finding credit
and capital, and information on the organic
certification.
Navdanya
Farmers Network has trained farmers across 17 Indian states in
food sovereignty, seed sovereignty, and sustainable agriculture for
two decades. Navdanya has set up over 100 community seed banks across
India and taught food sovereignty and sustainable agriculture to over
500,000 farmers. The organization continues to promote nonviolent
farming that protects biodiversity, small farmers, and the Earth.
Opportunity
International Agriculture Finance Program recognizes Africa is
home to 25 percent of the world’s arable land, yet generates only
about 10 percent of the world’s food output. Opportunity International
is looking to change that by improving African agriculture through
micro-financing. By providing farmers with loans, Opportunity
International can aid farmers in gaining the resources, training, and
knowledge necessary to create thriving agribusinesses.
Pangea
Giving for Global Change awards grants to small grassroots,
community-based organizations throughout Latin America, Asia, and
Africa. Grants are given to organizations working with community
members to address pertinent issues, from children’s education and
women’s rights to agricultural improvements, with solutions designed
to have lasting social impacts. Funding ranges from
USD$1,000–US$10,000, with a maximum award of USD$5,000 for first-year
grants.
Root
Capital has helped grow prosperous rural economies in Latin
America and Africa since 1999 by “lending capital, delivering
financial training, and strengthening market connections for small and
growing agricultural businesses.” Thus far, Root Capital has
distributed over USD$740 million to over 530 businesses working
towards building sustainable livelihoods.
RSF
Social Finance Seed Fund provides grantees with small gifts,
ranging from US$500–US$5,000, to provide financial support for
initiatives that address specific focus areas, one being food and
agriculture. RSF seeks grant proposals that are credible, feasible,
and sustainable; that foster collaborative work; that provide intended
results and outcomes; and that have beneficial economic, ecological,
and social impacts.
Southern
Oregon Farmer Incubator is a collaborative effort to train new and
beginning farmers. The incubator has a three-year program with several
components, including a program known as Growing
Agripreneurs, which uses a one-acre teaching farm to train nine
beginning farmers in designing and managing a new farm business. While
working on the incubator, farmers sell their produce to the local
Rogue Valley community.
Small
Planet Fund supports “courageous movements bringing to life
citizen-led solutions to hunger, poverty, and environmental
devastation around the world.” Each year, the fund awards grants to core
grantees, a select group of organizations that receive annual
funding, as to organizations at a critical point of development that
are dedicated to social change.
The
Garden Project—based out of San Francisco and originally created
to provide job training and support to former offenders—has its
participants work in an intensive program learning organic
horticulture and landscaping skills, preparing them for future
agriculture-based jobs. The Garden Project donates all produce grown
to local food pantries.
Turing
Foundation offers a Nature Conservation grant, which provides
money to organizations working towards marine conservation,
sustainable organic agriculture, and sustainable livestock production
in Southeast Asia, the Pacific Islands, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Most
grants are awarded to organizations proposing to work with local
partners. Funds are usually over USD$33,000 (€30,000) per year, with
some organizations receiving multi-million Euro grants over several
years.
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