The Commercial Products (COMPRO) project was initiated in November 2008 with an aim of assisting farmers in obtaining crop productivity enhancing products and stable yields that enable them generate more income through marketing their produce. The project’s objectives are to screen, evaluate, and scale up innovative chemical and biological commercial products. It is expected that this effort will increase crop yield by 30% and directly empower about 175,500 households (approximately 1.3 million persons) in selected areas in Kenya, Ethiopia, Niger, and Nigeria. Over the last 2 years, the project has been able to screen over 100 products from different private companies within and outside Africa. These products have been grouped into th...
This study is based on surveys of private-sector innovation and research in Kenya, Senegal, South Af...
In the past two years, ICRISAT, in collaboration with other International Agricultural Research Cent...
The INTSORMIL Production-Marketing Project with support from the USAID Africa’s regional program col...
During recent decennia, new commercial products have appeared on the market as alternatives to commo...
The N2Africa Soil Improvement project by CIAT-TSBF, which works with nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria t...
There is a proliferation of commercial bioinoculant products appearing on the market that claim majo...
Resource-poor African farmers are being given the chance to grow high-yielding crops, thanks to an i...
The population of Africa will double in the next 33 years to reach 2.5 billion by 2050. Although rou...
The development of sustainable agricultural businesses in high-value niche sectors can stimulate agr...
The private sector has been involved in the production and marketing of production inputs such as se...
The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) – a member of the CGIAR Consortium – develo...
Formal organic agriculture in Kenya dates back to the early eighties when the first pioneer organic ...
AGRICONGO (Institut de recherche et d'appui pour le développement agricole en zones tropicales) deve...
The project ‘Productivity and Growth in Organic Value Chains (ProGrOV)’ is a collaboration between u...
The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), a member of the CGIAR Consortium, develops...
This study is based on surveys of private-sector innovation and research in Kenya, Senegal, South Af...
In the past two years, ICRISAT, in collaboration with other International Agricultural Research Cent...
The INTSORMIL Production-Marketing Project with support from the USAID Africa’s regional program col...
During recent decennia, new commercial products have appeared on the market as alternatives to commo...
The N2Africa Soil Improvement project by CIAT-TSBF, which works with nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria t...
There is a proliferation of commercial bioinoculant products appearing on the market that claim majo...
Resource-poor African farmers are being given the chance to grow high-yielding crops, thanks to an i...
The population of Africa will double in the next 33 years to reach 2.5 billion by 2050. Although rou...
The development of sustainable agricultural businesses in high-value niche sectors can stimulate agr...
The private sector has been involved in the production and marketing of production inputs such as se...
The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) – a member of the CGIAR Consortium – develo...
Formal organic agriculture in Kenya dates back to the early eighties when the first pioneer organic ...
AGRICONGO (Institut de recherche et d'appui pour le développement agricole en zones tropicales) deve...
The project ‘Productivity and Growth in Organic Value Chains (ProGrOV)’ is a collaboration between u...
The International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), a member of the CGIAR Consortium, develops...
This study is based on surveys of private-sector innovation and research in Kenya, Senegal, South Af...
In the past two years, ICRISAT, in collaboration with other International Agricultural Research Cent...
The INTSORMIL Production-Marketing Project with support from the USAID Africa’s regional program col...