Farm Central Intelligence wins $10,000 AFEX Code Cash Crop 4.0 ag-hackathon
August 15, 2023548 views0 comments
Business a.m
AFEX, Africa’s leading commodities market player, recently hosted its fourth annual ag-hackathon, Code Cash Crop 4.0, themed ‘Scaling Market-led Solutions. The event saw the overall winner receive the $10,000 grand prize for the creation of Farm Central Intelligence, which seeks to develop an extensive database of agricultural information that can be accessed via a mobile app, WhatsApp chatbot, or a USSD platform
Afex’s Code Cash Crop is an industry event that harnesses innovation across the agriculture, finance and technology sectors to solve problems related to Africa’s food systems. It is also aimed at harnessing the intersection of technology, finance, and agriculture to create a platform for young tech enthusiasts to create viable solutions.
Through the annual challenge, AFEX empowers young tech talents and entrepreneurs in Nigeria and Kenya with the necessary resources to build profitable agric business models, thereby fulfilling its commitment to investing in the future of Africa.
This year’s edition drew participation from Kenya, for the first time, following AFEX’s operational expansion into the East African country last year. The grand finale, which was held recently in Lagos,produced three winners.
After a 2-day intensive boot camp, six finalists hailing from Kenya and Nigeria pitched their solutions at the grand finale to judges comprising of Jude Dike, co-founder of GetEquity; Hakeem Onasanya, head of startups at The Lagos State Employment Trust Fund; Nixon Gecheo, senior programme officer of AGRA and Funto Olasemo, VP,financial markets at AFEX.
Temitope Yakubu, a Nigerian entrepreneur, emerged as the overall winner of the $10,000 grand prize for his solution, Farm Central Intelligence, which seeks to develop an extensive database of agricultural information that can be accessed via a mobile app, WhatsApp chatbot, or a USSD platform. The platform which was designed to be user-friendly and accessible to farmers with low-end mobile phones, seeks to use USSD to provide farmers with access to information about agricultural products and buyers, offering a variety of features, including multilingual support, personalised capacity building, real-time agronomy support, and collaboration with input sellers and students.
In second and third place were Kenyan MCHE and Silo Africa, who received $5,000 and $3,000, respectively.
This year’s Ag-hackathon, which received over 100 applications over a 3-month period, pulled together the most daring and innovative solutions that addressed gaps across data, logistics, and extension services for Africa’s agriculture value chain. These were narrowed down to the 25 best, for which boot camps were held across three African cities to select the finalists, who later converged in Lagos for the final boot camp and live-pitch sessions with judges. The criteria for selecting winners throughout the challenge were four main parameters: viability, profitability, scalability and feasibility of each solution.
In his Keynote address, Ife Adebayo, digital Innovation Specialist at iDICE, spoke on youth-led innovations as an important part of the conversation of Scaling Market-Led Solutions. He said, “The essence of youth-led innovation lies in its ability to disrupt complacency. It thrives on pushing boundaries, dismantling the walls of convention, and carving new pathways where none existed before. It reminds us that innovation is not solely for established experts; it is a playground where anyone with a spark of inspiration can make their mark. And through their unwavering spirit, youth-led innovation has the power to bridge gaps, connect communities, and uplift societies.”
In between pitches, the event featured panel sessions with industry professionals such asYinka David-West,associate dean of Lagos Business School; Jude Dike, co-founder of GetEquity, and more,who shared insights on meaningful conversations cutting across agriculture, technology and finance.
Akinyinka Akintunde,President of AFEX Nigeria, speaking at this year’s finals, stated, “With Code Cash Crop, we remain dogged in our mission to provide a platform for young talents to create custom-fit models for the everyday and emerging Agricultural market realities. AFEX will continue to organise Code Cash Crop to empower more young people to think innovatively about Agriculture and deploy financial and mentorship resources to encourage them to transform Africa’s food systems through technological innovations. This year, we have had the pleasure of reviewing thoughtful applications and engaging with extraordinarily bright minds. We are therefore proud to present our incredible mix of Nigerian and Kenyan winners as judged by our stellar panel.”
Yakubu,the overall winner said,“Winning CCC 4.0 is a life-changing opportunity for me as an entrepreneur, and I would like to say ‘thank you’ to AFEX and its partners for the initiative. I am also grateful for the constructive feedback I received during the boot camp to improve my solution. I look forward to using this comp