The Blueprint Series: The Emerging Potential for Government in Digital Agriculture at KALRO

Feb 16, 2021 | Data & Tech Acceleration, Market Access

Mercy Corps AgriFin has partnered with GIZ and Dalberg on a Digital Platforms for Agriculture (DAP) program, a six-month initiative to work with platform partners and young technology innovators in Kenya and Nigeria exploring sustainable pathways to scale. As part of this work, AgriFin, GIZ, and Dalberg have produced a series of materials capturing insights and lessons learned associated with digital platforms for agriculture to be shared with public audiences. Access a downloadable version of this blog post. 

Access the Digital Agriculture Platform Blueprint documents:

Further Reading Related to this Series:

There are very few ‘quick wins’ for agri-tech organizations working to provide smallholder farmers with affordable and meaningful products and services. It can take many years for innovators to reach the scale they need to become viable, with one of the main reasons being the critical need to keep products affordable for a segment of the farming population with very low spending power.  

Plugging into an existing ‘platform’ can help agri-tech organizations to reach a large, established base of farmers or customers. Different emerging models of Digital Agriculture Platforms (DAPs) are explored in detail in a recent White Paper written by GIZ, Mercy Corps AgriFin, and Dalberg. This blog highlights some of the lessons we’ve learned from working with a government-led platform, the Kenya Agriculture and Livestock Research Organisation (KALRO). KALRO is an African leader in harnessing the power of technology and agricultural science to meet the needs of the diverse stakeholders of agricultural markets, including smallholders themselves. 

The potential for government to engage in the digital space for agriculture is immense, given their access to data, policy-makers, agricultural expertise, donor funding, investment, and a public mandate to drive sector-wide advancement. Technology innovation is not, however, a typical core strength of government and government-based DAP face both opportunities and challenges that define them. Our joint learning with GIZ and KALRO points to the following key points:

Neutral role and public trust in building networks and partnerships: Government institutions such as KALRO have pre-existing, and often long-standing relationships with other government bodies and public sector organizations that they can leverage to bring in additional value and depth quickly. For example, by making an adjustment to an existing MOU, KALRO can access a wide range of other datasets, scientific research, and even products that private sector players would not have access to. This provides unique value and an important role for government DAPs as they look to enable market actors in line with government priorities; 

There are strategic gaps for government to address in order to drive fully functioning platforms: Whilst government institutions like KALRO have strong expertise in scientific research and production of important resources, they have not typically built expertise in other areas that are critical to functioning as an enabler or facilitator for technology innovators. One of the gaps is an external-facing team that understands private sector needs and can promote the platform agenda by a) developing an updated marketing strategy and ‘business development’ plan to identify the right partners; b) solidifying partnerships with tech innovators (e.g. getting MOUs and data sharing agreements signed); c) managing relationships with partners over the long-term and working to inform improved policy regimes to drive digital innovation. 

Need for technology integration, data management, and product development expertise: government institutions like KALRO need to remain demand-driven, responsive, and collaborative with the private sector when it comes to providing best-practice agricultural products and data that can enable growth for farmers and agricultural stakeholders who provide retail services to them. This requires investment in data management skill and infrastructure, as well as product development expertise including user-centric designers and data scientists, to create products that add value to the market. There is also strong potential for government platforms to build integrations with market stakeholders through open APIs to share information, data, and products to transform markets. 

Ultimately, government DAPs could be a driver not only for the expansion of technology innovators across value chains but can also interact with other digital platform providers, including mobile network operators, banks, and agribusinesses to provide a unique and transformative value proposition if governments are ready to embrace digital opportunities for change and collaboration. 

Author: Victoria Clause

 

Access the Digital Agriculture Platform Blueprint documents:

Further Reading Related to this Series: