A sting in the Agra tale

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Independent expert evaluations confirm that the Alliance for a Green Revolution has failed.

Report available for download via the PDF button below.

In July 2020, an alliance of five African and five German organizations published the study “False Promises: The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)“. It is the first study to scientifically assess the impacts of AGRA – an agricultural alliance registered in the US, which is supported by numerous international organisations, governments in the Global North and some African governments. Central to the study was the question whether AGRA has achieved its own goals of doubling agricultural yields and the incomes of 30 million small-scale food producer households, thereby halving both hunger and poverty in 20 African countries by 2020. The study’s findings clearly revealed AGRA’s failure.

There is now new evidence of this failure from AGRA itself. Following a request based on the US Freedom of Information Act, AGRA had to publish both the internal mid-term evaluation and another eleven country evaluations on its website. The authors of the “False Promises” report, as well as representatives of another five African organisations, have analysed the AGRA evaluations and the country reports, and their findings include the following:

AGRA’s own evaluations comprehensively confirm the findings of the “False Promises” study: the AGRA approach has failed.

AGRA was far from achieving the goals it set for itself. In many cases, AGRA’s Green Revolution approach does not even provide the farmers involved in its projects with incomes that are above the poverty line.

AGRA systematically exerts political influence on fertilizer and seed legislation in partner countries in favour of agribusiness and to the detriment of smallholder producers, among other things by sending staff or providing direct financial support to ministries or advisory bodies of African governments. In this way, AGRA promotes and creates, through financial and other contributions, an institutional framework in many of its focus countries that makes its own Green Revolution approach binding through laws and framework conditions. In this way, AGRA ultimately legitimizes itself.

Based on these findings, this alliance of 16 African and German organizations conclude that donor governments in the Global North should cease all political and financial support for AGRA and shift their support to agroecology. In addition, African governments should withdraw from AGRA and other Green Revolution programs, and redirect spending towards the promotion of a more robust array of policies in support of agroecology.

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