Press releases
AECF launches a programme to help SMEs in Sudan
Nairobi, Kenya, March 06, 2024 – The AECF (Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund) has launched the Sudan SME Catalyser with an initial €12.5 million from the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) via KfW.
The programme seeks to support SMEs in Sudan relocating from conflict areas to more stable parts of the country. SMEs form a dynamic and independent part of the economy in Sudan, yet many have suffered losses of capital, markets, and sources of supplies.
Amid these challenges, SMEs have demonstrated to be a remarkable source of resilience. They offer the potential to address the current crisis by improving the availability of much-needed products and services and providing income and employment to low-income households.
This programme will provide access to grant finance and business advisory support to help companies re-establish production and processing activities, re-tool their business processes and find new markets and sources of supply. Funding will be available to companies in agriculture and renewable energy technologies and thus contribute to basic service delivery for the people of Sudan.
Using a challenge fund model, independent companies will be identified through a competitive process that provides fair and equal access to available investment and technical assistance funding. A particular focus will be on innovative business ideas with
demonstrable social impact.
Sudan remains in a devastating conflict that has destroyed large areas of the country, particularly around the capital, Khartoum, and led to forced migration of more than 8 million people both within the country and outside. More than 25 million people are struggling with soaring rates of hunger and malnutrition. Whilst all of Sudan has been impacted by the ongoing fighting, some areas remain outside of direct conflict and are now places of both refuge and business for the Sudanese people. Companies and entrepreneurs have moved to these new, safer locations and are seeking to re-establish their business operations.
Victoria Sabula, CEO of the AECF, said,
“The role of the private sector in conflict situations has not yet been fully recognized by humanitarian responses, but they have crucial ability to provide goods and services to difficult places. They have a unique understanding of local situations, connections to a wide range of actors and ways of getting into markets that foreign agencies cannot. We see the private sector as an important part of not only complementing the humanitarian response but building the basis for sustainable economic development. We thank the German Federal Government for supporting this innovative approach at this critical time.”
About AECF
AECF (Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund) is a leading non-profit development organization supporting innovative agribusiness and renewable energy enterprises to reduce rural poverty, promote resilient communities, and create jobs.
AECF provides patient capital to highly innovative, early-stage, and growing enterprises that are hidden gems poised for greatness but that struggle to access funding from traditional sources of finance. To date, we have supported over 432 businesses in 26 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, impacted more than 30 million lives, and created over 29,000 direct jobs.