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Gogettaz Agripreneur Prize 2024 Awards $100K to Moroccan Jafife & Ghanaian Kodu Technology

GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize Competition 2024 has named Moroccan Fatima El Khou, founder and Head of Research and Innovation at Jafife, and Ghanaian Dr Iddi Mohammed Faried, co-founder and CEO of Kodu Technology as winners of this year’s competition.

The grand prize winners each received USD $50,000 to scale their businesses. Jafife aims to revolutionize agri-food supply chain in Morocco with digitalized solar-powered technology that transforms crops and seafood into long-lasting dried food products while Ghana’s Kodu Technology transforms banana and plantain fibers into eco-friendly sanitary pads for women, addressing health and hygiene challenges.

According to Strive Masiyiwa, Founder and Chairman of Econet Group and GoGettaz Africa co-founder, “It’s remarkable to see the extraordinary number of African entrepreneurs who are pioneering solutions across so many African countries,” he noted. “The end is to build African enterprises that create jobs, that can scale, that can solve real problems as they build the prosperity of nations.”

In addition to the grand prizes, four young entrepreneurs were each awarded a $15,000 Impact Award, recognizing their transformative contributions across critical areas. The Impact Award winners include Kenya’s Charles Oyamo with Rethread Africa which converts agricultural waste from smallholder farmers into sustainable bioplastics, providing eco-friendly materials for various industries. DR Congo’s Tisya Mukuna, La BOITE produces La Kinoise coffee, cultivated and transformed entirely in Kinshasa, managing the entire value chain from plantation to processing and helping to revive abandoned coffee plantations and supporting local cooperatives.

Côte d’Ivoire’s Salimata Toh, AGRIBANANA transforms banana plant waste into eco-friendly products like natural fibres, paper pulp, and biodegradable packaging. Madagascar’s Riantsoa Mialinarindra, Sakafo processes fruits and vegetables grown by small-scale farmers into traceable, nutritious food products.

Additionally, each of the remaining 6 finalists received a GoGettaz “Young Catalyst Award” of $1,000 each, recognizing their excellence and catalytic contributions to grow, transform, and positively impact Africa’s agrifood systems:

Svein Tore Holsether, President and CEO of Yara International and co-founder of GoGettaz, emphasized the significance of youth-led innovation in addressing food security challenges. “These young entrepreneurs are transforming food systems with bold, inventive solutions. Their impact will resonate far beyond Africa.”

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