Smallholder SustaiNability Up-scaling Pro-gramme (SSNUP)


Recognising the gap in financing sustainable and resilient food systems globally, this multi-donor, public pri-vate partnership initiative is designed to catalyse private-sector investment in food systems, including from Swiss investors. By leveraging private investments and providing technical assistance to small and medium agribusiness enterprises, rural financial intermediaries and farmer organisations, the project promotes new income opportunities and better services for smallholder farmers and their application of more sustainable and nutrition-sensitive farm practices.

Land/Region Thema Periode Budget
Weltweit
Landwirtschaft und Ernährungssicherheit
Finanzdienstleistungen im Landwirtschaftssektor
Landwirtschaftliche Genossenschaften & Bäuerinnen- und Bauernorganisationen
Landwirtschaftliche Dienstleistungen & Markt
01.05.2025 - 30.04.2029
CHF  6’670’000
Hintergrund The latest SOFI report (FAO, 2024) reports that 733 million people, or one in eleven globally, experienced hunger in 2023; in Africa, 20.4% of the population faced hunger. 2.3 billion people faced moderate or severe food insecurity in 2023, while in Africa, 58% of the population was moderately or severely food insecure. Globally, 2.8 billion people were unable to afford a healthy diet in 2022. Smallholding farmers play a crucial in achieving SDG2 (zero hunger) and ensuring more sustainable and resilient food systems. Globally, smallholding employ a labour force of 1 billion people and feed many more. In Africa specifically, family farming contributes 80% of food production and employs between 60 and 70% of the population. Women cover 60-80% of the continent’s agricultural labour input. It is smallholders who are the custodians of land and local ecosystems, but they are increasingly forced to deal with high market volatilities, and the negative consquences due to conflicts or climate change. Meanwhile, the financing gap for ending hunger and at least some forms of malnutrition runs to hundreds of billions of dollars (FAO, 2024). Recognising the importance of private initiative in agriculture and food systems, this project seeks to stimulate private capital, mainly through so-called impact fund managers.
Ziele Smallholders improve their livelihoods and resistance to shocks and stresses while contributing to food systems which are based on the long-term, sustainable management of natural and human resources within sustainable agrifood systems, with broader and more equitable participation of society.
Zielgruppen

Direct beneficiaries: around 250 agribusiness enterprises, farmers’ organisations, and rural financial intermediaries which have business transactions with many smallholder house-holds.

End beneficiaries: at least 1,000,000 small-holder farmers using at least one offered solu-tion with 5,000,000 smallholders indirectly benefitting from the support provided through SSNUP partnerships.

Mittelfristige Wirkungen

Livelihoods – Smallholder households use new/improved financial services, capacity building services and market-access solu-tions in a way that improves their practices, productivity, capacity to absorb shocks and income levels.

Investments – Agricultural value chain actors sustainably grow through sales or portfolio growth, job creation, attraction of additional investments and adoption of sustainable management practices which are agroecologically conform, nutrition-sensitive and geographically focussed on Africa.

Market development - Impact fund managers increase investments in untapped und underserved agricultural markets in a way that continues to serve smallholders in evolving market and production environments.

Knowledge – Agrifood system actors appreciate the value of sustainable food production, processing, distribution and nutritious consumption practices, and increasingly incorporate them into their business practices.

Resultate

Erwartete Resultate:  

New/improved financial services are available and used by smallholder households.

Market access solutions are available to smallholder households to access sustainable inputs, equipment and relevant information, and investments made which are increasingly focussed in Africa, are nutrition-sensitive and conform to agroecological principles (priority topics).

Agricultural value-chain actors with low or no access to commercial capital benefit from de-risking mechanism(s) and build a track record to attract more investments in the future, i.e. through participation of new investments facilities in SSNUP.

Impact fund managers engage in a community of practice to share experiences and build knowledge


Resultate von früheren Phasen:   The programme was implemented with 9 partnering impact fund managers, 4 of which are either headquartered or with offices in Switzerland. As of December 2024, 102 Technical Assistance proposals benefiting 215 Agricultural Value Chain Actors (AVCAs) in 33 countries have been approved. These projects cover various areas such as internal management, financial services, non-financial services and market-building solutions, and benefit a wide range of organisations. There is a clear focus on Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where 174 out of the 215 (80%) beneficiary organisations are located. From a budgetary perspective too, the figure shows that 70% of the TA funding is destined for SSA. As of the end of the phase, at a conservative estimate, 1,4 million smallholder households are projected to have been reached directly or indirectly with new or adapted services, and the programme has attracted more than CHF 100 million in additional investment, surpassing the initially expected CHF 40 million. However, it was found that the programme could be more analytical in how it targeted positive food system outcomes and that disincentives to invest in local currencies were lowering the ambition to invest in local supply chains for food crops. In order to address this, the new phase will include measures to build mechanisms and partnerships to derisk investments and additionally incentivise investments into priority geographical and thematic areas, including SSA, agroecology and nutrition.


Verantwortliche Direktion/Bundesamt DEZA
Projektpartner Vertragspartner
Ausländische staatliche Institution
  • National State Institute North
  • Luxembourg’s Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs as lead donor (delegated cooperation agreement) Liechtensteiner Entwicklungsdienst (LED) LuxDev as programme partner 9-12 impact fund managers / technical assistance facilities as implementers, currently: AgDevCo, Alterfin, Bamboo Capital Partners, Incofin, Grameen Credit Agricole, Oikocredit, re-sponsAbility, Sidi, Symbiotics, four of which are either head-quartered or with offices in Switzerland ADA as programme coordinator/implementer


Koordination mit anderen Projekten und Akteuren

Synergies with SDC’s agriculture value chain projects in the partner countries concerned

Potential synergies with SECO in collaborat-ing with Swiss and other global impact fund managers

Synergies with other emerging facilities in the area of blended finance

Budget Laufende Phase Schweizer Beitrag CHF    6’670’000 Bereits ausgegebenes Schweizer Budget CHF    0 Budget inklusive Projektpartner CHF    22’000’000 Projekttotal seit Anfangsphase Schweizer Beitrag CHF   9’533’447 Budget inklusive Projektpartner CHF   28’500’000
Projektphasen Phase 2 01.05.2025 - 30.04.2029   (Laufende Phase) Phase 1 01.07.2020 - 30.04.2025   (Completed)