Bantu Gazette

Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Sports
  • Magazine
Menu
  • Black Frame Studio
  • Magazine

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

Report launched at Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 urges coordinated investment, innovation and policy reform to tackle hunger across the continent

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

The Africa Food Systems Report (AFSR) 2025

Refilwe Queenby Refilwe Queen
September 3, 2025
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

Report launched at Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 urges coordinated investment, innovation and policy reform to tackle hunger across the continent

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

The Africa Food Systems Report (AFSR) 2025

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

The Africa Food Systems Report (AFSR) 2025

Refilwe Queenby Refilwe Queen
September 5, 2025
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Africa needs $100 billion in investments by 2035 to overhaul its food systems, as hunger and undernourishment persist despite record agricultural production, according to the newly released Africa Food Systems Report 2025.

The report was launched Tuesday at the Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 in Dakar, Senegal, and stresses that fragmented efforts will not be enough to address deep-rooted challenges.

“This year’s AFSR is a roadmap for systemic transformation,” said Dr. John Ulimwengu, lead author of the report.

“By aligning investments, strengthening institutions and leveraging innovation, Africa can build inclusive agri-food systems that deliver decent jobs, healthy diets and sustainable growth for all,” he said.

Formerly known as the Africa Agriculture Status Report, the AFSR identifies five strategic imperatives to guide long-term reform.

These include integrating agriculture with health and trade policy, expanding agricultural insurance and climate-smart technologies, and improving governance through decentralized decision-making and better coordination among agencies.

Although Africa leads the world in agricultural output growth, the continent faces rising food insecurity and persistent child stunting.

The report highlights weaknesses across the food value chain that prevent increased production from improving nutrition.

Africa’s infrastructure financing gap, estimated between $67 billion and $108 billion per year, continues to limit market access and food distribution.

Poor roads, inadequate irrigation and insufficient cold storage isolate surplus-producing areas from those facing shortages.

Infrastructure and digital tools seen as key solutions

The report emphasizes the need for infrastructure investments such as railways, cold storage facilities and renewable energy systems to reduce food waste and boost regional trade.

It also recommends adopting digital tools, including AI-powered advisory services and blockchain platforms, to improve transparency and help smallholder farmers access markets and better prices.

To avoid fragmented funding approaches, the report calls for innovative financing models.

Blended public-private partnerships and climate-focused investment strategies could help mobilize the necessary capital.

The findings come as African leaders evaluate progress under the CAADP Kampala Declaration, which outlines targets for agricultural investment, value-added production, expanded irrigation and increased intra-African trade.

Without broad and coordinated reform, the report warns that hunger will worsen despite Africa’s agricultural potential.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy
Politics & Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

May 29, 2026
Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets
Politics & Economy

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

May 29, 2026
Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis
Politics & Economy

Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

May 29, 2026
Bantu Gazette
Opinion

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

May 29, 2026
Benin’s Romuald Wadagni Sworn In, Pledges Continuity and Inclusive Growth
Politics & Economy

Benin’s Romuald Wadagni Sworn In, Pledges Continuity and Inclusive Growth

May 25, 2026
Afreximbank Ends Fitch Ratings Relationship, Cites Misalignment
Politics & Economy

Afreximbank Net Income Rises 25% in First Quarter on Lending Growth

May 27, 2026

Most Recent

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

May 29, 2026
Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

May 29, 2026
Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

May 29, 2026
Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

May 26, 2026
Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

May 29, 2026
Namibia President Calls for Preservation of Cultural Heritage

Namibia President Calls for Preservation of Cultural Heritage

May 29, 2026
Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy
Politics & Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

by Samira Benhadda
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

African Development Bank's 2025 Industrialization Index ranks Morocco first on the continent, citing export diversification and sustained industrial policy reforms,...

Read moreDetails
Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets
Politics & Economy

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

by Kalkidan Negash
Reading Time: 4 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

African Union and IGAD observer missions are monitoring Ethiopia’s seventh general election as more than 50.5 million registered voters prepare...

Read moreDetails

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

Report launched at Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 urges coordinated investment, innovation and policy reform to tackle hunger across the continent

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

The Africa Food Systems Report (AFSR) 2025

Africa needs $100 billion in investments by 2035 to overhaul its food systems, as hunger and undernourishment persist despite record agricultural production, according to the newly released Africa Food Systems Report 2025.

The report was launched Tuesday at the Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 in Dakar, Senegal, and stresses that fragmented efforts will not be enough to address deep-rooted challenges.

“This year’s AFSR is a roadmap for systemic transformation,” said Dr. John Ulimwengu, lead author of the report.

“By aligning investments, strengthening institutions and leveraging innovation, Africa can build inclusive agri-food systems that deliver decent jobs, healthy diets and sustainable growth for all,” he said.

Formerly known as the Africa Agriculture Status Report, the AFSR identifies five strategic imperatives to guide long-term reform.

These include integrating agriculture with health and trade policy, expanding agricultural insurance and climate-smart technologies, and improving governance through decentralized decision-making and better coordination among agencies.

Although Africa leads the world in agricultural output growth, the continent faces rising food insecurity and persistent child stunting.

The report highlights weaknesses across the food value chain that prevent increased production from improving nutrition.

Africa’s infrastructure financing gap, estimated between $67 billion and $108 billion per year, continues to limit market access and food distribution.

Poor roads, inadequate irrigation and insufficient cold storage isolate surplus-producing areas from those facing shortages.

Infrastructure and digital tools seen as key solutions

The report emphasizes the need for infrastructure investments such as railways, cold storage facilities and renewable energy systems to reduce food waste and boost regional trade.

It also recommends adopting digital tools, including AI-powered advisory services and blockchain platforms, to improve transparency and help smallholder farmers access markets and better prices.

To avoid fragmented funding approaches, the report calls for innovative financing models.

Blended public-private partnerships and climate-focused investment strategies could help mobilize the necessary capital.

The findings come as African leaders evaluate progress under the CAADP Kampala Declaration, which outlines targets for agricultural investment, value-added production, expanded irrigation and increased intra-African trade.

Without broad and coordinated reform, the report warns that hunger will worsen despite Africa’s agricultural potential.

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

Report launched at Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 urges coordinated investment, innovation and policy reform to tackle hunger across the continent

Africa’s Food Systems Need Systemic Change, Not Piecemeal Fixes

The Africa Food Systems Report (AFSR) 2025

Refilwe Queenby Refilwe Queen
September 3, 2025

Africa needs $100 billion in investments by 2035 to overhaul its food systems, as hunger and undernourishment persist despite record agricultural production, according to the newly released Africa Food Systems Report 2025.

The report was launched Tuesday at the Africa Food Systems Forum 2025 in Dakar, Senegal, and stresses that fragmented efforts will not be enough to address deep-rooted challenges.

“This year’s AFSR is a roadmap for systemic transformation,” said Dr. John Ulimwengu, lead author of the report.

“By aligning investments, strengthening institutions and leveraging innovation, Africa can build inclusive agri-food systems that deliver decent jobs, healthy diets and sustainable growth for all,” he said.

Formerly known as the Africa Agriculture Status Report, the AFSR identifies five strategic imperatives to guide long-term reform.

These include integrating agriculture with health and trade policy, expanding agricultural insurance and climate-smart technologies, and improving governance through decentralized decision-making and better coordination among agencies.

Although Africa leads the world in agricultural output growth, the continent faces rising food insecurity and persistent child stunting.

The report highlights weaknesses across the food value chain that prevent increased production from improving nutrition.

Africa’s infrastructure financing gap, estimated between $67 billion and $108 billion per year, continues to limit market access and food distribution.

Poor roads, inadequate irrigation and insufficient cold storage isolate surplus-producing areas from those facing shortages.

Infrastructure and digital tools seen as key solutions

The report emphasizes the need for infrastructure investments such as railways, cold storage facilities and renewable energy systems to reduce food waste and boost regional trade.

It also recommends adopting digital tools, including AI-powered advisory services and blockchain platforms, to improve transparency and help smallholder farmers access markets and better prices.

To avoid fragmented funding approaches, the report calls for innovative financing models.

Blended public-private partnerships and climate-focused investment strategies could help mobilize the necessary capital.

The findings come as African leaders evaluate progress under the CAADP Kampala Declaration, which outlines targets for agricultural investment, value-added production, expanded irrigation and increased intra-African trade.

Without broad and coordinated reform, the report warns that hunger will worsen despite Africa’s agricultural potential.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

by Samira Benhadda
May 29, 2026
0

...

Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

by Kalkidan Negash
May 29, 2026
0

...

Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

by Aissatou Fall
May 26, 2026
0

...

Bantu Gazette

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

by Felix Tih
May 25, 2026
0

...

Benin’s Romuald Wadagni Sworn In, Pledges Continuity and Inclusive Growth

Benin’s Romuald Wadagni Sworn In, Pledges Continuity and Inclusive Growth

by Felix Tih
May 24, 2026
0

...

Afreximbank Ends Fitch Ratings Relationship, Cites Misalignment

Afreximbank Net Income Rises 25% in First Quarter on Lending Growth

by Kalkidan Negash
May 23, 2026
0

...

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

by Samira Benhadda
May 29, 2026
0

African Development Bank's 2025 Industrialization Index ranks Morocco first on the continent, citing export diversification and sustained industrial policy reforms,...

Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

by Kalkidan Negash
May 29, 2026
0

African Union and IGAD observer missions are monitoring Ethiopia’s seventh general election as more than 50.5 million registered voters prepare...

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

by Kalkidan Negash
May 27, 2026
0

With COP32 one year away and set to be hosted in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia is making the case that Africa...

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

by Marina Bisse
May 26, 2026
0

President Denis Sassou-N'Guesso made the announcement on Africa Day in Brazzaville as the African Development Bank opened its annual meetings...

Next Post
Angola Opens $473M Cabinda Refinery to Cut Fuel Imports

Angola Opens $473M Cabinda Refinery to Cut Fuel Imports

Crude-for-Naira Plan Gains Ground as Nigeria Pushes for Energy Market Reform

Nigeria to Impose 5% Fuel Tax in 2026 Amid Economic Strain

Ghana Scientist Calls for Policy Education in Schools

Ghana Scientist Calls for Policy Education in Schools

Rwanda Debuts Africa’s First Self-Flying Air Taxi

Rwanda Debuts Africa’s First Self-Flying Air Taxi

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact
Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Magazine