As sales dropped in a central market due to COVID fears, an asset grant enabled Viphya Chambo to buy and repurpose a three-wheeled vehicle to expand delivery, meet consumer demand and live up to its purchasing commitment.
North of Malawi, in Rumphi district, lies a base of smallholder farmers who produce and sell fish solely to their community at farm-gate prices – less than £2.00 per kg. About 100 km away, Viphya Chambo, the biggest tilapia fish farm in northern Malawi, struggles to supply enough fish for consumption to the 212,272 residents of Mzuzu, one of the three major cities in the country.
Bringing these two parties together to partner for mutual expansion, the UK’s flagship Commercial Agriculture for Smallholders and Agribusiness (CASA) programme is delivering one of its key targets: inclusive growth through improved smallholder incomes in agribusiness.
With CASA’s support, Viphya Chambo provides the smallholder farmers with quality fingerlings and equips them with improved production techniques to boost their productivity. At harvest time, the farmers will aggregate their fish, and Viphya Chambo will off-take at an agreed – higher than the farm-gate – price. This will increase incomes for the contracted smallholders whilst enhancing fish supply volumes for the fish farm, enabling them to meet Mzuzu market demand and boost their revenues.
Operating globally with technical work in the field in Malawi, Nepal and Uganda, CASA aims to change how investors, donors and governments view and invest in agribusinesses that work with smallholder supply chains. In showcasing win-win models like the Viphya Chambo partnership, where more equitable commercial relationships allow for better incomes for both smallholders and the agribusinesses that work with them, the programme boosts economic growth and increases demand for smallholder produce.