Sahel Capital, a private investment firm dedicated to expanding Africa’s agribusiness sector, has announced that its Social Enterprise Fund for Agriculture in Africa (SEFAA) has secured a $10 million investment from the Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund. The partnership, funded by MEDA Mauritius, will contribute to expanding financing for small and medium-sized agribusiness enterprises across sub-Saharan Africa. “Since the inception of the Fund in 2021, we have processed 33 facilities to 18 companies in 7 countries in SSA”, Mezuo Nwuneli, Managing Partner of Sahel Capital, said in a press release. SEFAA’s strengthening
Three Nigerian students from Caleb University have built an app to detect ripe Fruit. Harmony Abayomi, Frida Efod, and Chibuzor Nwachukwu have developed Valor, an AI-powered app designed to detect fruit ripeness, as BBC Africa stated. The Hackathon Abayomi, Efod, and Nwachukwu recently represented the Computer Science, Cybersecurity, and Software Engineering departments and took first place at Bell’s University Hackathon with their app, Valor. Writing on LinkedIn, Abayomi said, “My team from Caleb University took home the top prize with our web and mobile app, Valor. Our app uses the
The Black Farmer Fund (BFF) is raising $20 million for its second fund, BFF Fund 2.0, aimed at strengthening the Black food system across the Northeast. BFF is a community-driven investment fund that supports Black agricultural and food businesses to build a more equitable food system. This milestone will provide financial support to Black-owned agricultural and food businesses, with $2 million of the integrated capital fund already invested in four innovative enterprises. The fund is part of BFF’s mission to create a sustainable, equitable food system by offering patient, low-interest
The Nigerian agritech startup has just announced that it raised $4.2million through a seed round and a series of grants to scale its business across the country. Releaf, which has built a proprietary hardware and software solution to make farmers and food factories more efficient and profitable, was first launched in 2017 by Ikenna Nzewi and Uzoma Ayogu. The pair then went on to build Kraken, a proprietary patent-pending machine. But how does it actually work? Releaf buys nuts from farmers, then uses the Kraken to crack the nuts and crush the kernels into