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The magazine for the developing world<br />

UNLOCKING<br />

AFRICA’S<br />

INVESTMENT<br />

POTENTIAL<br />

■ Interview with Jorge Rocha de Matos<br />

President of AIP - p.3<br />

■ Infoterra and PROGIS: Using spatial information<br />

systems to aid Food Security - p.4-5<br />

■ <strong>EMRC</strong> AFIF 2007: Goals, achievements and<br />

perspectives - p.6-7<br />

■ Global Fund and UNAIDS prove fighting diseases<br />

spurs development - p.8-9<br />

■ <strong>EMRC</strong> AgriBusiness 2008 at the FAO headquarters:<br />

programme - p.11<br />

Published quarterly by<br />

Economic missions achieved<br />

in Israel and Spain - p.10


Editorial<br />

The man in the mirror<br />

2008 started on the wrong foot for the African continent –“As always”, pessimists might say… Sadly,<br />

everlasting crisis in Darfur (Sudan), instability in Ituri (East DRCongo), and recent violence in Kenya<br />

still generate a common feeling of insecurity towards the African continent as a whole. “As usual”,<br />

millions of refugees will add their misery to the number of overpopulated urban metropolis; peasants<br />

will abandon their land in search for a brighter future; and children will suffer from curable diseases,<br />

due to the lack of vaccines… These are the sad “clichés” about Africa the world receives frequently<br />

through the eyes of the international media.<br />

Philippe van Maldeghem<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

Reality is often distant from the “published” truth, as news come and go, but sometimes leaving<br />

deep prejudice behind. Fortunately, some visionaries are still taking up the challenge, regardless of<br />

the country’s image. The consequence of such bad press can be disastrous for the regions in focus:<br />

foreign investors will be driven out of a region qualified as “unstable”, preventing therefore investments<br />

which are vital for future development. Examples of countries still suffering from the negative<br />

press coming from past conflicts are numerous: Angola, Sierra Leone or Mozambique, to name a few.<br />

Nonetheless, Africa’s countries are vast, and rich in diversity. This perception ought to be taken into<br />

account by foreigners willing to set up businesses in these untamed “Eldorados”. Africa’s development<br />

can only succeed through overcoming stereotypes and establishing private partnerships between<br />

businessmen from Northern and Southern hemispheres. To that extent, members of <strong>EMRC</strong> realize<br />

how much dialogue is a key factor of success, since it enables business agreements and networking.<br />

Parallel to those private initiatives, let’s hope the upcoming French presidency of the EU will tackle<br />

the issues around the new series of economic partnership agreements with ACP countries, which<br />

were due to be in place by the start of the year. A successful Africa should aim at increasing Trade<br />

over Aid. More than ever, the EU has to be ready to give the developing world control over its own<br />

development. This process passes precisely through shared business ideas becoming reality, using the<br />

know-how, contacts and expertise from the developed countries.<br />

To the question: “Who will stand up to give Africa a chance?” The answer starts with the<br />

(business)man in the mirror…<br />

Upcoming projects this year:<br />

■ Economic mission to Israel: 13 to 17 April 2008<br />

■ <strong>EMRC</strong> Agribusiness Forum at FAO headquarters, Rome, Italy: 18 to 20 June 2008<br />

■ Economic mission to Bié, Angola: third quarter of 2008<br />

■ European Development Days, Strasbourg, France: 15 to 17 November 2008<br />

■ Africa Finance and Investment Forum (AFIF): end of 2008<br />

The next issue of Dialogues Magazine will feature a special focus on Zimbabwe<br />

The magazine for the<br />

developing world<br />

Published quarterly<br />

by<br />

Publisher: Idit Miller<br />

Editor-in-Chief:<br />

Philippe van Maldeghem<br />

Main contributors:<br />

Jeanne McCaul,<br />

Hans Gössl, Pierre Coetzer<br />

Designer: Bird<br />

ADVERTISING INQUIRIES<br />

Communication Officer:<br />

Hans Gössl<br />

Tel: +32 (0)2 626 15 17<br />

Fax: +32 (0)2 626 15 16<br />

Email: hg@emrc.be or<br />

dialogues@emrc.be<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong> International<br />

Av. Louise, 283 – bte 22<br />

Brussels 1050, Belgium<br />

Tel: +32 (0)2 626 15 15<br />

Fax: +32 (0)2 626 15 16<br />

Email: info@emrc.be<br />

Website: www.emrc.be<br />

The views expressed in this issue of Dialogues are the private views of individuals and are not necessarily those of <strong>EMRC</strong> International, its executive committee, or members of its business<br />

network. Reproduction in whole or in part is permitted, providing that any such reproductions, whether in whole or in part, are not sold, unless they are incorporated in other works.<br />

- DIALOGUES - <strong>EMRC</strong>


I nterview<br />

Jorge Rocha de Matos<br />

President of AIP<br />

(Portuguese Industrial Association)<br />

Lisbon, December 2007<br />

■ Dialogues: : In your opinion, what were<br />

the main results of the EU-Africa Business<br />

Summit?<br />

Rocha de Matos: : The EU-Africa Business<br />

Summit was an important moment for the settlement<br />

of a new dynamism in the relations<br />

with Africa. This dynamism considers the regional<br />

agreements of economic partnerships<br />

as well as the promotion of an effective integration<br />

of African countries in the<br />

global and regional economy.<br />

The EU-Africa Business Summit<br />

represented an opportunity for<br />

the African and European business<br />

leaders to develop approaching<br />

mechanisms and to debate on<br />

“thematic round table” subjects<br />

such as commerce, investment and<br />

development of resources and infrastructures.<br />

The event was also<br />

important for the reinforcement of<br />

reliable relations at political, institutional<br />

and business level.<br />

■ Dialogues: Throughout the last<br />

decade <strong>EMRC</strong> has organised numerous<br />

international initiatives to expand<br />

business linkages between Europe and Africa.<br />

How do you see these initiatives?<br />

RdM: AIP–CE considers it very important<br />

to promote this type of initiative by organisations<br />

that represent the civil society and<br />

particularly the business sector. These organisations<br />

play a fundamental role in the promotion<br />

of relations between the two continents.<br />

It is at the level of decentralized cooperation<br />

between companies that it is possible to establish<br />

durable relations and to share common<br />

interests.<br />

■ Dialogues: What actions can be taken in<br />

order to strengthen the relations between<br />

Africa and Europe?<br />

RdM: At a political level, the European Union<br />

has developed a strong cooperation process<br />

with the private sector through working<br />

José Amaro Tati, Governor of the Angolan Province of Bié, discussing business<br />

opportunities with Portuguese entrepreneurs at the AFIF Forum.<br />

meetings and action instruments that have<br />

taken place throughout almost one decade:<br />

to start, the first historical EU-Africa Summit<br />

in 2000 in Cairo under the Portuguese Presidency<br />

that gave origin to the Declaration and<br />

the Cairo Plan of Action; then the launching<br />

in 2001, of the New Partnership for Africa’s<br />

Development (NEPAD); in 2002, the creation<br />

of the African Union (AU) and; in 2005, the<br />

European Commission adopted its communication<br />

on “Strategy of the EU for Africa”,<br />

which was approved by the European Parliament<br />

and Council. It’s consensual that it is<br />

really important to deepen this framework<br />

of cooperation and common action. Europe<br />

can have a very important role in the field of<br />

education, training, R&D and countries like<br />

Portugal with long and strong relations with<br />

Africa can and should be important partners<br />

of this Continent, in order to minimize the<br />

constraints to its development. I believe that<br />

the European Union will benefit politically,<br />

economically and strategically if it gives<br />

more attention to Africa and if it knows how<br />

to find the right instruments for cooperation.<br />

I am sure that the business community of both<br />

continents is an active and very interested<br />

part of this partnership for the development<br />

and the competitive affirmation of Africa in<br />

the global economy.<br />

Jorge Rocha de Matos and Idit Miller<br />

■ Dialogues: As President of the AIP, do<br />

you see the promotion of relations between<br />

the Members of your Association with Africa<br />

– mainly the PALOPs (African Portuguese<br />

Speaking Countries) as a priority?<br />

RdM: We have strong relations with Africa,<br />

and in first place with PALOPs.<br />

The conferences, the training<br />

courses at the public and private<br />

level, the business missions in different<br />

sectors and the approach to<br />

associative structures similar to<br />

ours are some of the many initiatives<br />

that AIP-CE has developed<br />

with the African continent. Although<br />

PALOPs are the main partners<br />

of the AIP-CE in Sub-Saharan<br />

Africa, our collaboration is not<br />

restricted to these countries.<br />

For example, we have the case of<br />

South Africa, where we have one<br />

of the biggest Portuguese emigrant<br />

communities, and which is also<br />

one of our priorities. We also develop initiatives<br />

with other North Africa countries. ■<br />

About AIP-CE<br />

Counting more than 75.000 direct and indirect<br />

associated members, Portuguese Industrial Association/Entrepreneurial<br />

Confederation has<br />

consistently worked towards the improvement of<br />

the Portuguese economy’s competitiveness, with<br />

special focus on organisational and technological<br />

modernisation of its SMEs. Aiming to represent<br />

and defend the Portuguese entrepreneurs’<br />

interests, AIP-CE is known for its unique position<br />

in the associative movement in Portugal. It<br />

is active in providing a wide range of services<br />

for its members, for instance by organising international<br />

trade fairs and conferences or promoting<br />

international expansion.<br />

Quarterly - Spring 2008 -


Mapping Africa to unlock wealth<br />

Infoterra is a leading provider of geo-information products and services, which have become<br />

vital for managing the world’s environment, development and security. The Infoterra Group has<br />

approximately 300 employees in the UK, France, Germany and Hungary and an extensive network<br />

of partners covering all five continents.<br />

”<br />

What we are looking to achieve<br />

using geospatial mapping, is<br />

to unlock Africa’s wealth”,<br />

says Simon Ashby, Principal<br />

Consultant with Infoterra. He goes on to explain<br />

that security of land ownership is key<br />

to development, while reliable mapping is a<br />

prerequisite to land and property registration<br />

and ownership.<br />

The total landmass of Africa is 30.3 million<br />

square kilometers while, by contrast,<br />

Argentina, India, China, Western Europe<br />

and the USA, together make up 28.8 million<br />

square kilometers. Meanwhile, the<br />

maps of Africa are completely out of<br />

date, going back to Colonial times. For<br />

instance, the massive urbanisation, which<br />

has taken place in recent decades, has remained<br />

essentially unrecorded.<br />

Geospatial mapping, a digital technology,<br />

which provides detailed and reliable spatial<br />

data, is the 21st century’s answer to<br />

those old fashioned, hand drawn maps to<br />

be found in antique shops.<br />

Raw data, such as accurate land statistics and<br />

infrastructure, is transformed into business<br />

information for the benefit of both the public<br />

and private sectors. The examples of areas of<br />

application of this technology are impressive:<br />

improved land, water and forest management,<br />

biodiversity and conservation,<br />

determining crop prospects and desertification<br />

risks, alerts on natural disasters,<br />

communication network planning<br />

(roads, railways, electricity, telecom…),<br />

establishing accurate topology such as<br />

building heights, etc.<br />

The technology of geospatial mapping<br />

is already being considered and implemented<br />

in a number of developing<br />

countries in Eastern Europe, such as Bulgaria,<br />

Romania, the Balkans, Macedonia and Kosovo<br />

– in particular to settle land ownership issues<br />

exacerbated by the fact that many records<br />

of ownership were lost or destroyed during recent<br />

conflicts.<br />

Today national spatial frameworks can be<br />

created and constantly modified to reflect<br />

changed circumstances on the ground, such as<br />

urbanisation. Britain has had a national mapping<br />

agency since 1791 and, following a comprehensive<br />

digitisation programme, resulting<br />

in the release of Ordinance Survey’s MasterMap®<br />

in 2001, now has one of the most<br />

sophisticated national geographic frameworks<br />

in the developed world.<br />

Infoterra’s online spatial application supporting a<br />

Land Administration business process<br />

The MasterMap® references over 440 million<br />

natural and manmade landscape features<br />

to which 5,000 changes are made daily. This<br />

is an example of what is technically possible,<br />

provided the political will is there and the finances<br />

allocated.<br />

The technology of<br />

geospatial mapping is<br />

already being considered and<br />

implemented in a number<br />

of developing countries in<br />

Eastern Europe<br />

“The challenge we face is implementation”,<br />

says Ashby. In 2006 the Africa Land Policy<br />

workshop in Kampala recognised that implementation<br />

was far from straight forward.<br />

A policy document has been drawn up, but it<br />

must be translated into a comprehensive programme<br />

of land sector reform. “Governments<br />

need to give the concessions to implement the<br />

available technology and investment banks<br />

should provide the funding”, says Ashby.<br />

Population drift to the cities increases informal<br />

land tenure systems, which in turn, increase<br />

slums. Approximately 70% of African<br />

land is managed informally, with profound<br />

consequences on sanitation, water and access.<br />

Such un-formalised rural, peri-urban and urban<br />

tenures affect the poorest people.<br />

Since they do not formally own the<br />

land, they have no rights on it nor incentives<br />

to develop it.<br />

Currently countries that have recognised<br />

the importance of land administration<br />

are trying to develop individual<br />

approaches, but this is not cost<br />

effective. Therefore, the Land Administration<br />

Retreat hosted in November<br />

2007 by the World Bank in Washington<br />

and attended by several UN agencies,<br />

recommended the establishment<br />

of universal principles and standards.<br />

It was also recommended that the importance<br />

of technology for good governance<br />

should be recognised and that<br />

countries should be identified for case studies.<br />

Subsequently, the Land Registrars Expert<br />

Group Meeting in Nairobi, highlighted the<br />

value of communicating with Land Registrars.<br />

These a-political civil servants are responsible<br />

for registering land tenure.<br />

“Typically, registration of property will<br />

take 400 days in, for instance, Nigeria.<br />

Reducing this procedure to a tenth of<br />

this, for instance by establishing a state<br />

data-base to support registrations, would<br />

be an enormous incentive for development.<br />

Once people have secure ownership<br />

of their land, they will then feel<br />

safe to perhaps purchase their neighbor’s<br />

land, allowing the neighbor to pursue<br />

another profession or trade, to which they are<br />

perhaps better suited” says Ashby. “Needless<br />

to say, such a data-base would also be of great<br />

help in land feuds and in preventing corruption.<br />

The African Union is very interested in<br />

the potential of geospatial systems and, fortunately,<br />

some African countries are moving in<br />

the right direction”. ■<br />

- DIALOGUES - <strong>EMRC</strong>


Upstream or downstream,<br />

we all drink from the same<br />

source…<br />

Walter Mayer, CEO of Progis<br />

Walter Mayer, CEO of PROGIS GmbH,<br />

a respected GIS-software supplier and<br />

consulting company, is emphatic: “There is<br />

no reason at all for farmers, consumers and<br />

environmentalists to be enemies. After all, we<br />

all have the same concerns. When the river is<br />

polluted upstream, everyone downstream suffers.<br />

The future has to be not either food or<br />

water and environment, but both, for all of us.<br />

It follows that it is in everybody’s interest to<br />

respect our valuable resources - such as water<br />

- and invest in managing them well. And by<br />

the way, this challenge is the same in developed<br />

as well as developing countries!”<br />

PROGIS has been focusing for several years<br />

on the development of the appropriate technical<br />

applications for efficient management<br />

of agriculture, forestry, ecology and general<br />

land-use. The company advocates an integrated,<br />

holistic approach, encompassing the<br />

needs of farmers and affiliated industries and<br />

authorities. Many large industries and organisations<br />

are already benefitting from this expertise<br />

and can serve as examples and references.<br />

Mayer goes on to explain that the basic<br />

management model is similar for individual<br />

farmers, groups of farmers, or large co-operatives.<br />

The challenge is to use the model integrating<br />

agriculture, and/or forestry as well as<br />

environmental tasks. (In this context the FAO<br />

actually poses the question in its recent annual<br />

publication: should farmers be paid to protect<br />

the environment?) There is also a real need<br />

for politicians everywhere to understand how<br />

technology can be of help.<br />

The World Bank has been asking how information<br />

technology can contribute to the<br />

well-being of communities. “We have the answers,”<br />

says Mayer. “Environment problems<br />

can be solved by information technology. For<br />

example, instead of guessing as farmers did<br />

in the past, technology allows us to make accurate<br />

calculations as well as evaluations. We<br />

can calculate the optimum use of fertiliser and<br />

we can evaluate the quality of the water (levels<br />

of nitrogen) and monitor the processes on<br />

an everyday basis.”<br />

The topic of “rural area management” is inseparably<br />

connected with the sustainability<br />

of a healthy environment. The cultivation of<br />

fields, pastures or forests has direct effect, not<br />

only on food, feed and bio-energy, but also on<br />

the earth’s atmosphere, land, water, and biological<br />

resources.<br />

To meet all these challenges, multi-class collaborations,<br />

supported by an increased use of<br />

advanced ICT-technologies and tools, are essential.<br />

“Together with ‘SaRAM’, a specific<br />

education and training programme, we recently<br />

launched a product range, called ‘AGROffice<br />

complete’. With ‘one-stop-shop’ all the<br />

needs on rural area ICT can be met”, says<br />

Mayer. SaRAM itself informs on situations,<br />

expectations, chances and risks in rural areas,<br />

trains software users and helps stakeholders to<br />

get ready for this rapid and dynamic market<br />

development. It assists participants and supports<br />

them by implementing agro-projects in<br />

countries or regions.<br />

PROGIS works in close collaboration with<br />

Infoterra (see previous page) ■<br />

Netafim: household name for<br />

irrigation technologies<br />

Netafim describes itself as a “growing solutions”<br />

company and is the world’s largest<br />

low volume irrigation company. In fact, Netafim<br />

has become a household name in the business<br />

of irrigation. The company has 45 years of experience<br />

in 110 countries on 5 continents via 35<br />

subsidiaries, as well as additional, independent,<br />

Netafim trained representatives worldwide.<br />

Manufacturing facilities have also been established<br />

in 11 countries and there are over 2200<br />

employees.<br />

“Today everybody is concerned with issues<br />

regarding the environment. But the subject is<br />

far from new; it is just that awareness has increased<br />

on every level of society, also with the<br />

general public. However, we have been dealing<br />

with the subject of environment for over 4<br />

decades, always with the aim to increase crop<br />

yield, while preserving water resources and the<br />

environment. Over the years we have developed<br />

tailor-made solutions for many different<br />

needs and conditions. These include irrigation<br />

technologies and crop management (open field<br />

crops, orchards and greenhouses), desalination<br />

and purification, industrial waste water treatment,<br />

solutions for bio-fuel energy, etc.” says<br />

Natan Barak, Netafim’s Commercial Director<br />

for Europe, Middle East and Africa.<br />

The company’s clients include governments,<br />

communities and private entrepreneurs. But<br />

Barak describes the company’s approach and<br />

philosophy as fundamentally “farmer to farmer”.<br />

Indeed: the company originated in an Israeli<br />

Kibbutz (co-operative farm) and at the present<br />

time 3 Kibbutzim own the majority shares of<br />

the company with 50% of the owners still active<br />

members of these Kibbutzim.<br />

Netafim is well-known for its flexibility and<br />

creativity in finding solutions to sometimes very<br />

difficult local circumstances, for instance in developing<br />

countries faced with limited financial<br />

resources.<br />

“We take into account the existing strengths and<br />

energies in each situation and can ensure good<br />

returns and profits on average within 3 years,<br />

even with minimum financial investment. The<br />

problems facing the world today concern us all.<br />

Population growth is a global reality. Inevitably,<br />

we will have to increase food production<br />

and yields and, more and more, we will need to<br />

achieve this using less and less water, because<br />

water resources are not only limited, they are<br />

shrinking, “ says Barak. ■<br />

Barak: “Netafim’s solution for family-sized farming: an excellent application that enables<br />

families to produce their own food with minimal resources.”<br />

Quarterly - Spring 2008 -


Africa Finance &<br />

Investment Forum 2007:<br />

Success stories in Africa’s<br />

private sector development<br />

Africa<br />

FORUM<br />

2007<br />

Finance& Investment<br />

How to unlock Africa’s investment potential? Representatives<br />

from four continents and 25 countries gathered at the <strong>EMRC</strong><br />

Africa Finance & Investment Forum 2007 on 5-7 December in<br />

Lisbon to discuss and showcase the investment potential of<br />

Africa’s diverse private sectors.<br />

18-99-99-9 14-50-100-0 9-19-94-0<br />

The <strong>EMRC</strong> Forum was organised<br />

within the bigger framework of the<br />

first EU-Africa Summit in seven<br />

years, which took place at the same location<br />

one day after the private sector event. Held<br />

under the high patronage of the Portuguese<br />

Presidency of the Council of the European<br />

Union, the event thus complemented the<br />

discussions of the political Summit with its<br />

specific focus on Africa’s private sector development.<br />

Showcasing practical<br />

business solutions<br />

Idit Miller, Managing Director at <strong>EMRC</strong> International,<br />

defined the added value of<br />

Kingsley Moghalu, Head of Global Partnerships<br />

at The Global Fund: “The three pandemics - HIV/<br />

AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria (...) are described<br />

as diseases of poverty because, compared to<br />

wealthy parts of the world, their impact in developing<br />

countries is devastating.”<br />

the <strong>EMRC</strong> Forum in its emphasis on practical<br />

business solutions and direct exchange<br />

possibilities with major decision makers.<br />

According to her, “this Forum gives a unique<br />

exchange opportunity for private investors<br />

across Africa and Europe to drive the economy<br />

in Africa.”<br />

In its three-day programme the Africa Finance<br />

& Investment Forum presented a wide<br />

range of successful business initiatives in<br />

Africa’s private sector. High-rank speakers<br />

showcased funding opportunities as well as<br />

first-hand analysis of Africa’s financial markets<br />

and enabling environment for sustainable<br />

investment. Special sessions on Public-Private-Partnership<br />

programmes on agriculture<br />

and rural development, health and spatial<br />

data infrastructure completed the exchange of<br />

success stories and best practices. Throughout<br />

these intensive discussions, participants<br />

were given additional possibilities to meet<br />

in targeted one-to-one business meetings<br />

and explore concrete business projects and<br />

partnerships.<br />

A concluding key moment took place at the<br />

event’s Gala Evening with the announcement<br />

of the <strong>EMRC</strong> Awards. These prestigious<br />

Awards honoured selected achievers,<br />

heads of commercial and national financial<br />

institutions in Africa for their leadership<br />

and achievements in Africa’s economic<br />

development.<br />

The joint organisation with the EU-Africa<br />

Business Summit on the <strong>EMRC</strong> Forum’s<br />

last day gave participants additional contact<br />

opportunities with key-note speakers,<br />

such as José Sócrates, President of the<br />

Council of the European Union and José<br />

Barroso, President of the European Commission<br />

as well as with government officials,<br />

business leaders and development experts<br />

like Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director<br />

of the World Bank and Louis Michel, EU<br />

Commissioner for Development.<br />

Gideon Gono, Governor of The Reserve Bank of<br />

Zimbabwe and Philippe van Maldeghem<br />

Identifying Investors and<br />

project owners<br />

Ibrahim Mallam Aliyu, Chairman of Urban<br />

Shelter Limited, one of the representatives of<br />

the Nigerian private sector said his attendance<br />

at the <strong>EMRC</strong> Forum has been rewarding.<br />

“I have unlocked my potentials and those of<br />

Nigeria at the event. My presence has led to<br />

an acquaintance of investors willing to come<br />

to Nigeria – open a shopping mall and a hotel.<br />

The investment summit is a gathering of<br />

potential investors and those who need the<br />

resources.”<br />

“It is our aim to gather the best heads in this<br />

platform” explained Idit Miller, “and we do<br />

not leave it with this. Following our <strong>EMRC</strong><br />

Forums we organise targeted Economic Missions,<br />

tailored events and advise participants<br />

with our business development services to<br />

follow-up the valuable contacts and expertise<br />

gained from the event.”<br />

Africa is not only about business potential, but<br />

also about business success. <strong>EMRC</strong>’s Africa<br />

Finance & Investment Forum has shown concrete<br />

examples of the continent’s private sector<br />

contribution to sustainable development. ■<br />

- DIALOGUES - <strong>EMRC</strong>


A programme of the ACP group and the<br />

European Commission for the promotion<br />

of investment<br />

Starting in July this year, the upcoming<br />

French presidency of the European Union<br />

should tackle the issue of EU-ACP economic<br />

partnership agreements. In line with it,<br />

Pro€Invest is a programme undertaken by the<br />

European Commission to promote and facilitate<br />

the inward flow of investment, technology,<br />

know-how and management skills to the<br />

ACP States. It is financed under the 8th European<br />

Development Fund and managed by<br />

an autonomous unit within the Centre for the<br />

Development of Enterprise (CDE) under the<br />

supervision of EUROPEAID, the Cooperation<br />

Office of the European Commission. The<br />

strategy of the Centre for the Development of<br />

Enterprise is based on three principles, “sector<br />

+network+partnership”, where wider sectorial<br />

projects will be implemented through a complete<br />

range of services offered to small and<br />

medium enterprises.<br />

Microfinance: Bright<br />

prospects in Cameroon<br />

The ACP Group of States and the European<br />

Commission are in the process of signing the<br />

prolongation of the programme until the end<br />

of March 2011. While the underlying objectives<br />

of the Pro€Invest programme remain<br />

valid, the emphasis of the programme will be<br />

increasingly put on institutional strengthening<br />

among ACP Intermediary Organisations (IOs).<br />

The final scope is the public-private dialogue<br />

between IOs and governments. Therefore, direct<br />

assistance to small and medium enterprises<br />

will decrease: these are expected to benefit<br />

indirectly from the strengthened capacity of<br />

IOs. The programme will also include interventions<br />

with Regional Organisations and<br />

support of IOs through the Pro€Invest Information<br />

Community (PIC).<br />

The PIC will aim to ensure co-ordination,<br />

cross-fertilisation and the avoidance of duplication<br />

of effort between all EC-funded programmes.<br />

It may refer applicants to other programmes<br />

for interventions which are sound<br />

but otherwise ineligible for funding under<br />

Pro€invest. The programme consists of unblocking<br />

€110 million over 7 years. ■<br />

“Microfinance is emerging as a major driving force of the<br />

economy in Cameroon”, says Mr Michel Nyami, the Deputy<br />

Director General of Crédit Communautaire d’Afrique, or CCA<br />

Microfinance.<br />

CCA is a leading provider of microfinance<br />

in the CEMAC monetary area, and is involved<br />

in numerous economic development<br />

projects. “We focus on people with no access<br />

to the formal banking system, providing them<br />

with the capacity to raise finance for microprojects”.<br />

Indeed, over 70 % of CCA’s client<br />

base falls in this category. In 2007, CCA<br />

attracted savings of 27 million euros, and<br />

financed projects to the tune of 15 million<br />

euros, mostly out of current account deposits.<br />

“We offer individuals an original way of<br />

building up savings based on a system of joint<br />

surety given by for periods of between three to<br />

six months. In this way loans can be raised by<br />

people who would not have been able to do so<br />

individually”. This approach is proving very<br />

popular: So far, over 31,000 loans have been<br />

granted by CCA, a threefold increase since<br />

2005. And Nyami is keen to emphasise CCA’s<br />

commitment to its customers: “We are looking<br />

to create a bond of trust with marginalised<br />

parts of the population. For instance, we<br />

helped setting up a cooperative of 300 small<br />

farmers in the field of medicinal plants under<br />

the wing of AFRIMED”. Furthermore, the<br />

authorities in Cameroon have clearly realised<br />

the importance of microcredit institutions.<br />

Michel Nyami receiving the <strong>EMRC</strong> Award, on<br />

behalf of Albert Nkemla from CCA, Cameroon.<br />

CCA’s aim is to find reliable partners prepared<br />

to offer long term credit facilities. This would<br />

allow it to respond to the rising demand for<br />

the financing of medium to long term projects.<br />

“We are faced with two types of challenges:<br />

First, we handle almost exclusively current<br />

account cash deposits, which are not suited<br />

to any time-related commitments. Secondly,<br />

local microfinance institutions fundamentally<br />

lack refinancing and compensation mechanisms”.<br />

The successful establishments of partnerships<br />

will be important to secure CCA’s projects for<br />

the coming five years. ■<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong> Awards 2007<br />

A key moment of the event was the Gala Evening, where individuals were honoured for their leadership<br />

and achievements in Africa’s economic development. This year’s <strong>EMRC</strong> Awardees were: Albert<br />

Nkemla of Crédit Communautaire d’Afrique, Cameroon, Martin Djedjes of BIAO (Banque Internationale<br />

pour l’Afrique Occidentale), Ivory Coast, Dablé Grah, Roche Internationale, Ivory Coast,<br />

Théophile Gogui Zegre, SOGEPIE, Ivory Coast, Gideon Gono, Governor of The Reserve Bank of<br />

Zimbabwe and Adriano Pascoal, President of the Banco de Comércio e Indústria de Angola.<br />

Babs Adenaike, Programme Manager at Pro€Invest (right),<br />

presenting the Award to Martin Djedjes of BIAO, Ivory Coast (left)<br />

Quarterly - Spring 2008 -


I nterview<br />

Michel Lavollay<br />

Senior consultant for UNAIDS<br />

Brussels January 2008<br />

Michel Lavollay was practicing medicine in<br />

Paris when AIDS was discovered. He got involved<br />

with this disease in the 1980’s, and cooperated<br />

with French and international institutions<br />

to find responses to deal with the issue.<br />

This led him as far as the WHO in Geneva, the<br />

UNDP as well as at the UN Secretariat in New<br />

York, private foundations, and at the French<br />

Embassy in Washington. He then spent four<br />

years in the early creation of the Global Fund<br />

to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, where he<br />

pushed for the establishment of a public/private<br />

strategy and funding mechanisms.<br />

Considering this heavy experience, he works<br />

now in Brussels as senior consultant for a variety<br />

of organisations and, more recently, UN-<br />

AIDS, where he aims at reinforcing the discussions<br />

on health, HIV, diseases linked to poverty<br />

and partnerships with the private sector.<br />

■ Dialogues: How would you define<br />

UNAIDS’ priorities regarding the poverty<br />

situation in developing countries, since<br />

health problems are often linked to poverty<br />

and impede development?<br />

ML: UNAIDS’ experience is critical, because<br />

a lot of what is being discussed for the moment<br />

on health, partnerships, or mechanisms for delivery<br />

of services in the poorest countries, is<br />

very much related to what was achieved in<br />

responding to HIV. The participation of<br />

UNAIDS as well as other institutions -<br />

like the WHO or the Global Fund, the<br />

World Bank, and the UNDP, is essential<br />

to maintain a discussion on these health<br />

topics and the broader discussions on<br />

development objectives. UNAIDS’ role<br />

is also important in creating partnerships<br />

with the European institutions, governments,<br />

and the civil society. We aim to help the<br />

dialogue between civil society organisations<br />

and local institutions. Actually, just talking<br />

about the problems is not enough! Solutions<br />

and practical mechanisms to bring additional<br />

resources and capacities, in order to improve<br />

the efficiency of delivery of development aid<br />

must be found, and that is a real challenge.<br />

DG DEV (Directorate for Development of the<br />

European Commission) has an important and<br />

clear role in strengthening partnerships.<br />

■ Dialogues: Big organisations created by<br />

the UN or the EU suffer criticism because of<br />

their complexity and delay before action is<br />

implemented. In your opinion, what could be<br />

done for these organisations to acquire a better<br />

knowledge on the matter and to improve<br />

the public/private partnerships?<br />

ML: There is an interesting parallel to draw<br />

between the transitions at the UN in the past<br />

twenty years, and what can happen with the<br />

EU, in the sense that the EU must go through<br />

transitions and transformations that take time<br />

in order to integrate fully civil society in its<br />

work. This is not about theory but reality and<br />

how partnerships can actually exist. The reality<br />

is that private corporations are developing<br />

programmes and partnerships on the ground<br />

with local authorities, NGOs, and are actually<br />

transforming the reality in these particular<br />

regions through these partnerships. It is this<br />

sort of action that needs to be valued and promoted.<br />

T he various institutions, the interested<br />

stakeholders and groups like <strong>EMRC</strong>, who<br />

have a critical role to play in bringing the people<br />

together like you did it in Lisbon, have to<br />

be supported in establishing a dialogue and to<br />

gradually bring the stakeholders to a common<br />

understanding that there is value and a benefit<br />

in these discussions, not just for the institutions,<br />

but also for the private sector. What is<br />

The problem is not the<br />

lack of resources, because<br />

governments are receiving large<br />

amounts of money. It is more a<br />

question of dialogue<br />

and understanding.<br />

striking in Brussels is that everyone, politically<br />

and in various parts of the EU process,<br />

is convinced that nothing can be done without<br />

public/private partnerships. This takes time<br />

and requires a confidence-building process.<br />

The potential partners must feel confident<br />

that what they bring to the various partnerships<br />

will not be modified or be deviated from<br />

their original purpose because companies get<br />

involved to do business! We have to stay away<br />

from substitution and philanthropy!<br />

I have participated with other institutions and<br />

bilateral entities in developing an approach<br />

that we call co-investment, a simple mechanism<br />

in which partners negotiate the terms of<br />

their partnerships in order for them to achieve<br />

common goals. These co-investments in areas<br />

such as HIV or malaria are being implemented<br />

in Africa. There are even projects now that<br />

benefit not only the partnerships, but also the<br />

eco-systems. For example, in some coastal areas<br />

in East-Africa, the regression of malaria<br />

allowed to promote tourism and other secondary<br />

benefits that are far beyond public health<br />

and have a direct impact on the local economies.<br />

Potentially, this is a constructive way to<br />

look at development.<br />

■ Dialogues: A healthy environment creates<br />

and promotes development. In your opinion,<br />

what could be done to help governments focus<br />

on social issues, allowing therefore private<br />

companies to focus on business issues?<br />

ML: Today it is basically a question of necessity.<br />

If you analyse what public, private and<br />

local NGOs can achieve at a local level, the<br />

political variable is out of the equation. There<br />

is a lot less evaporation of funds nowadays and<br />

we can clearly see what these organisations<br />

can do together. The problem is not the lack<br />

of resources, because governments are receiving<br />

large amounts of money. It is more a<br />

question of dialogue, and understanding.<br />

Discussions are needed, because business<br />

objectives can be compatible with<br />

social objectives. Furthermore, there is a<br />

need to define and promote the kinds of<br />

mechanisms by which the objectives are<br />

not lost. The business community needs<br />

to be confident that its contributions<br />

are respected, that the lines of responsibility<br />

are well identified and that the monitoring is<br />

shared in order to reach common objectives.<br />

The analysis of what actually happens in practice<br />

shows us that common objectives can be<br />

found, that there are methodologies defined<br />

between the parties involved. But at the institutional<br />

level, there is always a tendency<br />

to interpret and mistrust. So the discussions<br />

should be focused on what is happening in<br />

concrete terms. All these elements from real<br />

- DIALOGUES - <strong>EMRC</strong>


“Health is Wealth”<br />

The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis<br />

and Malaria is headquartered in<br />

Geneva, Switzerland. It was set up in 2002<br />

at the initiative of the then Secretary General<br />

of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, to<br />

mobilise, manage and disburse large sums<br />

of money, initially to combat the spread of<br />

HIV/AIDS in developing countries. Mr Annan<br />

put his money where his mouth was by<br />

time situations can be included in models that<br />

will be used to create partnerships and share<br />

experiences.<br />

■ Dialogues: Considering that a company’s<br />

experience can stimulate other companies<br />

to follow its footsteps, could you give us an<br />

example that proves that the system works,<br />

where partnerships are actually taking<br />

place?<br />

ML : The Malawi project, is a very important<br />

project that was introduced four to five<br />

years ago, that I helped negotiate, where<br />

the Ministry of Health received one of the<br />

first rounds of grants from the Global Fund<br />

($ 200 Million) on HIV treatment. The proposal<br />

was considered a very sound one but,<br />

not unexpectedly, within a year the government<br />

started to have some problems executing<br />

and implementing. The process at the Global<br />

Fund is results-based and if a recipient can’t<br />

deliver, then, either solutions are found, either<br />

the grant is lost. For the Malawi situation, we<br />

argued that there was a structured coalition of<br />

businesses involved in HIV. It included more<br />

than thirty companies, working together on<br />

the disease with clinics and trained personnel.<br />

After two years, the coalition negotiated the<br />

terms of delivery of a large part of the grant,<br />

which enabled the government to actually<br />

keep the grant. This shows that you can create<br />

large scale partnerships using the capacity,<br />

additional financial and technical resources.<br />

This example has become a very interesting<br />

and useful model for future projects.<br />

There are also very interesting initiatives regarding<br />

Malaria, like MOZAL, in South-Africa<br />

and Mozambique, developed for three<br />

years now. Joint programmes between local<br />

governments, the Global Fund and NGOs<br />

have been implemented to distribute medicine<br />

and treatments for malaria, which has brought<br />

very significant and rapid results, on the workforce,<br />

as well as on their families and the local<br />

communities. Also, the eco-system has benefited<br />

from these joint programmes and as a<br />

result, tourism has grown. ■<br />

making a personal donation of USD100,000<br />

to what he called the “war chest”.<br />

Today, five years later, the Fund’s assets total<br />

USD 21 billion, of which 10 billion have<br />

been committed to health programmes already<br />

approved by the fund in 136 countries on 5<br />

continents. Moreover: today the Fund’s programmes<br />

target not only HIV/ AIDS, but also<br />

the two other major poverty-related pandemics:<br />

malaria and tuberculosis. At the present<br />

time, the Fund’s money accounts for 65% of<br />

available international resources in the fight<br />

against tuberculosis, 65% for malaria and 25%<br />

for HIV/AIDS. Within the Fund’s investment<br />

portfolio in developing countries, spending is<br />

almost evenly spread with 60% allocated to<br />

HIV/AIDS and 40% to malaria and tuberculosis<br />

combined. Contributors to the Fund include<br />

governments, institutions, foundations<br />

and private individuals. A donation from the<br />

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation totalled<br />

USD650 million.<br />

‘The three pandemics are<br />

closely related and often occur<br />

together, with the same<br />

devastating consequences,<br />

in particular for developing<br />

countries in Africa, Asia,<br />

Latin America and the Caribbean<br />

and also Eastern Europe.<br />

Of course these diseases<br />

exist globally. However: they<br />

are described as diseases of<br />

poverty because, compared<br />

to wealthy parts of the world,<br />

their impact in developing<br />

countries is devastating. Not<br />

only is there a lack of money for healthcare<br />

itself, but the extent of the diseases in poor<br />

countries poses a fundamental threat to development,<br />

claiming 6 million lives every year.<br />

Clearly, social and economic development is<br />

impossible where populations are decimated<br />

by disease. Health is wealth. Therefore, the<br />

situation needs to be met by what I consider<br />

to be a new approach to international health<br />

financing”, says Kinsley Moghalu, a former<br />

corporate lawyer who is Head of Global Partnerships<br />

of the Global Fund. This approach<br />

aims to address health treatment not merely<br />

by distributing medications, but on the multiple<br />

levels of prevention, treatment and care.<br />

Never prescriptive, the Global Fund is managed<br />

on a basis of a public partnership between<br />

so-called developed and developing<br />

countries. The policy is “bottom-up” to enable<br />

each country to take full ownership. Mechanisms<br />

for co-operation and co-ordination are<br />

in place for every individual project. Inputs<br />

are received from local governments, civil society,<br />

NGO’s, associations and so forth. The<br />

Economic development starts with the<br />

eradication of “diseases of poverty”<br />

needs are assessed locally, and before implementation,<br />

all programme proposals submitted<br />

for financing are carefully evaluated from<br />

technical, quality and potential impact points<br />

of view by an independent panel of technical<br />

experts retained by the Global Fund. The<br />

process of making funding decisions is a rigorous<br />

one: roughly half of all proposals are<br />

successful. Results are also evaluated, making<br />

it possible to confirm that almost 2 million<br />

lives were saved since the establishment<br />

of the Fund. Results have been especially encouraging<br />

in Ruanda, Tanzania and Sri Lanka,<br />

among others.<br />

“With regard to HIV/AIDS, one of the greatest<br />

challenges is to tackle issues of cultural<br />

stereotypes. An example often quoted is the<br />

belief in some countries that this disease can<br />

be cured by having sex with a virgin! But there<br />

are many other pre-conceived ideas and superstitions,<br />

based on traditional<br />

cultural and social systems,<br />

or simply due to lack of education.<br />

In short, education<br />

is key”, says Moghalu, “especially<br />

because, as yet, no<br />

cure has been found for this<br />

disease.”<br />

“As for malaria, it needs to<br />

be arrested at the source.<br />

A strategic, environmental<br />

approach should include a<br />

combination of general sanitation,<br />

draining of swamps<br />

where mosquitoes breed, use<br />

of long lasting insecticide<br />

treated bed nets and approved pesticides in rural<br />

and urban areas and, needless to add, and<br />

as with HIV/AIDS, universal access to medication<br />

and treatment.”<br />

Until recently, it seemed that tuberculosis had<br />

been all but eradicated in developed countries.<br />

Its recurrence in the form of dangerous new<br />

strains has become a global concern, requiring<br />

global strategies. Overall, having successfully<br />

mobilized USD21 billion over the past<br />

six years, another strategic challenge confronting<br />

the Global Fund is that developing<br />

countries need to scale up effective demand<br />

for the Fund’s money for more ambitious<br />

prevention, treatment and care programmes.<br />

“Yes, the Fund has made an impact, but we<br />

are not resting on our ears. Defeating these<br />

pandemics requires much more work on the<br />

part of developing countries and their international<br />

partners, such as the Global Fund”, says<br />

Moghalu. The Global Fund’s new approach to<br />

health financing proposes a multilevel philosophy<br />

and quality of partnership that offers hope<br />

for the future.■<br />

Quarterly - Spring 2008 -


<strong>EMRC</strong>’s Economic Missions:<br />

Establishing new partnerships<br />

between Africa and Israel<br />

Africa’s recent economic development<br />

emphasises the continent’s potential for<br />

sustainable business partnerships. <strong>EMRC</strong> takes<br />

concrete actions to build new bridges between<br />

business leaders from the North and South. In<br />

2007, <strong>EMRC</strong> has led two Senior Management<br />

Economic Missions for African business leaders<br />

and government representatives to Israel.<br />

Several partnerships as result of these missions<br />

have prompted <strong>EMRC</strong> to organise a third Senior<br />

Management Economic Mission Africa-Israel<br />

in 2008.<br />

Scheduled to take place from 13 to 17<br />

April 2008, the third Economic Mission<br />

Africa-Israel will provide participants<br />

with intensive exchange possibilities on<br />

latest business developments and technologies<br />

in agro-industry and agriculture. Israel<br />

is a worldwide leader in agricultural innovation.<br />

Due to a long experience in these sectors,<br />

the country plays a major role in the worldwide<br />

supply of innovative water and environmental<br />

technologies. Consequently, the most advanced<br />

irrigation, solar and water generating electricity<br />

technologies as well as the world’s biggest desalinisation<br />

centre can be found in the country.<br />

A concrete initiative as outcome of one of EM-<br />

RC’s Economic Missions to Israel has already<br />

been established in the Province of Katanga<br />

in DRC. Following the visit to Israel, H.E. Mr<br />

Katumbi, Governor of Katanga, invited <strong>EMRC</strong><br />

to led a delegation of agricultural experts and<br />

business leaders from Israel to Katanga. This<br />

working visit enabled an in-depth analysis of<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong>’s upcoming Economic<br />

Mission Africa-Israel will<br />

aim to create further successful<br />

partnerships in the field of agriculture<br />

and agro-industry<br />

business opportunities as well as personal contacts<br />

to high-rank officials and private sector<br />

business leaders. In a follow-up visit of officials<br />

and entrepreneurs from Katanga to Israel, the<br />

Israeli government decided to finance and execute<br />

feasibility studies in Katanga’s fishing and<br />

farming sectors. <strong>EMRC</strong> manages, accompanies<br />

and coordinates the<br />

project development for the involved partners.<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong>’s upcoming Economic Mission Africa-Israel<br />

will aim to create further successful<br />

partnerships in the field of agriculture and agroindustry.<br />

The five day programme represents an<br />

excellent opportunity for African business leaders<br />

to expand their business network and to gain<br />

direct insight in latest agribusiness technology<br />

developments.<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong> will guide participants to targeted<br />

one-to-one business meetings as well as<br />

to field visits to greenhouses, drip-irrigation<br />

systems, solar energy plants, dairy<br />

and poultry farms as well as aquaculture<br />

sites and biotechnology applications in<br />

agriculture. A concluding visit will be dedicated<br />

to the Holy Sites in Jerusalem and Bethlehem.<br />

Africa’s private sector not only shows potential,<br />

but also offers concrete business opportunities.<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong>’s targeted Economic Missions help to<br />

transform these opportunities in sustainable<br />

success stories. ■<br />

”<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong>’s Business Development Services:<br />

Opening up new business opportunities<br />

have clearly discovered new business opportunities<br />

for my producers in the Eu-<br />

I<br />

ropean market”, says Mamadou Dijte, CEO<br />

of the Senegalese fruits and vegetable trader<br />

Agral-Export.<br />

During a five-day trip to Spain, he has met major<br />

fruits and vegetable trading companies in<br />

Barcelona and Valencia. In pre-arranged business<br />

meetings, Djite gained first-hand insight<br />

in the European market conditions for Senegalese<br />

fruit and vegetables. “Even though I<br />

have only spoken to trading companies based<br />

in Spain”, explains Djite, “their international<br />

outreach can also allow me to enter the Central<br />

and Eastern European market.” And the<br />

prospects for getting into business are good:<br />

Senegalese fruits and vegetables are an ideal<br />

bridge during the season gap between the European<br />

and South American production.<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong> has been the driving force behind these<br />

business match-makings. As part of its Business<br />

Development Services for <strong>EMRC</strong> members,<br />

the <strong>EMRC</strong> team analysed European fruits<br />

and vegetable markets in order to identify the<br />

best partners for Agral-Export to take a firm<br />

step into the European market. In a second<br />

stage, <strong>EMRC</strong> organised and guided the fiveday<br />

trip to Spain to enable a personal exchange<br />

between Agral-Export and Spanish traders. The<br />

success of these meetings can be measured by<br />

several received partnership proposals. “To be<br />

honest”, Djite confirms. “I have received too<br />

many proposals to be able to keep up with all<br />

of them.”<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong> accompanies the development of these<br />

partnership proposals and advices Agral-Export<br />

on market access regulations and certification<br />

procedures for its fruits and vegetables.<br />

<strong>EMRC</strong>’s specific Business Development Services<br />

(BDS) provide members of the <strong>EMRC</strong><br />

network with networking activities, market<br />

access analysis as well as lobbying, project<br />

funding and public relations consultancy.<br />

Agral-Export’s expanded business contacts<br />

François Kacen from <strong>EMRC</strong> (centre), co-ordinating the<br />

encounter with Mamadou Djite and Spanish traders<br />

are one practical result of <strong>EMRC</strong>’s mission to<br />

promote economic relations between business<br />

leaders from Africa and the North.<br />

“We will have to change some of our processes<br />

and produced varieties”, concludes Djite<br />

after his discovery of business opportunities<br />

in Europe’s fruits and vegetable market. “But<br />

I can now see a big potential for my Senegalese<br />

producers in the European market.” ■<br />

10 - DIALOGUES - <strong>EMRC</strong>


PRELIMINARY<br />

Programme<br />

Agri<br />

FORUM<br />

2008<br />

Business<br />

The Agro-Food Industry<br />

as Engine for Growth and<br />

Wealth in Africa<br />

18 - 20 June 2008 * FAO<br />

Headquarters * Rome, Italy<br />

1ST DAY – WEDNESDAY 18TH JUNE 2008<br />

■ Workshop: Innovation Strategy and Regional Innovation Systems. Presentation of Participants<br />

■ Official Opening Session of the AgriBusiness Forum 2008<br />

Pierre Mathijsen, President <strong>EMRC</strong>, former Director General at the European Commission<br />

Top Management Representative of the FAO, Italy<br />

Key Note Speaker: Dr Franz Fischler, EU Commissioner for Agriculture & Rural Development from 1995 to 2004 and Chairman<br />

of the Ecosocial Forum Europe<br />

■ Projects Incubator: Innovative Agro-Industry Projects from Africa. The best project will be rewarded with the <strong>EMRC</strong> Award<br />

■ Networking place: One-to-One Sectoral Business Meetings<br />

2ND DAY – THURSDAY 19TH JUNE 2008<br />

■ Session I: PPP in Agriculture as a Platform for Growth and Wealth<br />

Doyle Baker, Chief of Agricultural Management, Marketing & Financial Service - FAO, Italy<br />

Ayisi Makatiani, Managing Director – AMSCO (African Management Services Co.), South Africa<br />

Rustom Masalawala, Associate Director - The Earth Institute at Columbia University, USA<br />

Nick Railston-Brown, Country Director - TechnoServe, Ghana<br />

■ Session II: Investing and Financing African Agro-Food Industry<br />

■ Part I: Responsible financing solutions to boost the agro-food industry in view of sustainable growth<br />

Oscar Chemerinski, Director Agribusiness Department – IFC (Int’l Finance Corporation), USA<br />

Bart-Jan Krouwel, Managing Director – CSR, Rabobank, The Netherlands<br />

Daniel Kalabassou, General Director – Credit du Sahel, Cameroon<br />

■ Part II: How can donors contribute to strengthen the agro-food sector?<br />

Kevin Cleaver, Assistant President Prog. Mngmt Dev. – IFAD (Int’l Fund for Agric. Dev.), Italy<br />

Maurits de Koning, Royal Tropical Institute – KIT, The Netherlands<br />

Christoph Langenkamp, Task Leader Agriculture & Rural Policy - GDPRD (Global Donor Platform for Rural Dev.) and Ministry<br />

of Economic Cooperation & Development, Germany<br />

■ Parallel workshops: Innovative projects to boost the Agribusiness<br />

■ Workshop I: Practical Research and Innovation for a sustainable growth in agriculture: practices and experiences learnt<br />

Monty Jones, Executive Secretary – FARA (Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa), Ghana<br />

Mark Holderness, Executive Secretary – GFAR (Global Forum on Agricultural Research), Italy<br />

Suresh K. Raina, Programme Leader – ICIPE (African Insect Science for Food & Health), Kenya<br />

Ides De Willebois, Director Eastern & Southern Africa – IFAD, Italy<br />

■ Workshop II: Enabling Rural Economy - using ICT and spatial data resources to build self-sustaining rural communities<br />

Simon Ashby, Principal Consultant – Infoterra, UK<br />

Walter Mayer, CEO – Progis Software, Austria<br />

■ Session III: Adding value to the Agriculture<br />

■ Part I: Making use of local raw material to replace imports and promote production of finished products in Africa – the Heineken case<br />

Henk Knipscheer, Sr Managing Director – Global Operations, Winrock International, USA<br />

Thomas de Man, President, Heineken Africa and the ME, The Netherlands<br />

John Mbonu, General Manager, SLBL (Sierra Leone Brewery Ltd) – Heineken, Sierra Leone<br />

■ Part II: Creating wealth and ensuring food security at the roots of the AgriBusiness sector in Africa - the Olam International case<br />

Moochikal D. Ramesh, President & Regional Head S&E Africa – Olam International, South Africa<br />

Chris Brett, Senior VP & Head of C.S.R. - Olam International, South Africa<br />

■ Networking place: Gala Evening. Presentation of the <strong>EMRC</strong> AGRIBUSINESS AWARDS 2008<br />

3RD DAY – FRIDAY 20TH JUNE 2008<br />

■ Food Safeties, Health and Nutrition<br />

■ Part I: Standards and certification for a better sanitary and food safety<br />

Nigel Garbutt, Chairman - GlobalGAP, Germany<br />

■ Part II: Fighting major health problems in the community through programmes led by food producers, which involve the local<br />

farmers and international agencies<br />

Michel Lavollay, Senior Advisor on Health (HIV-Malaria-TB), Belgium<br />

Quarterly - Spring 2008 - 11


Agri<br />

FORUM<br />

2008<br />

Business<br />

Initiated and organised by:<br />

In collaboration with:<br />

Agro-Food Industry<br />

as Engine for Growth and Wealth<br />

18-20 June, FAO Headquarters, Rome, Italy<br />

Finding Successful Partnerships.<br />

Agribusiness is the key sector for Africa’s private<br />

sector development. And the continent’s agriculture<br />

and food industry clearly have potential. But how to<br />

turn potential into sustainable growth and wealth?<br />

The <strong>EMRC</strong> AgriBusiness Forum 2008 will discuss<br />

latest trends, new technologies, best practises and<br />

practical solutions. The event will be opened by<br />

Franz Fischler, EU Commissioner for Agriculture and<br />

Rural Development 1995-2004, and offers:<br />

• Top-level participants from four continents and<br />

more than 25 countries<br />

• Plenary sessions, workshops and targeted one-toone<br />

business meetings<br />

• AgriBusiness Awards 2008 for outstanding leadership<br />

and business successes<br />

Making Business Development Work.<br />

Aimed at direct exchange and practical business<br />

solutions, the three day programme will facilitate<br />

North-South partnerships and identify latest business<br />

opportunities. To follow up discussed case studies<br />

and valuable contacts, <strong>EMRC</strong> offers participants<br />

targeted Economic Missions and tailor-made Business<br />

Development Services after the event.<br />

You enter the Forum<br />

and we build your business bridge.<br />

For detailed programme & registration,<br />

please contact Caterina Giuliano:<br />

agribusiness2008@emrc.be<br />

or cg@emrc.be<br />

Tel: +32 (0) 26 26 15 15<br />

or visit www.emrc.be<br />

Sponsors:

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