Comesa sets up technical facility to empower SMEs

THE Comesa Business Council (CBC) working with the private sector has launched a technical capacity strengthening project to empower small and medium entrepreneurs in standards and food safety management systems. The programme known as the Local Sourcing for Partnerships Project (LSPP) aims at helping SMEs to effectively participate in trade by addressing constraints, which prevent them from being integrated into national and regional supply chains.

The project will first be piloted in six Comesa countries namely Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia.

As part of the implementation plan, the CBC convened the first quarterly meeting of the steering committee of the LSPP in Lusaka on Thursday.

The role of the committee is to provide oversight of the project. It is composed of key private sector players from the Comesa region with a mandate to provide guidance on pertinent issues related to this project in the area of policy, objectives, budget, strategies and resource allocation.

Chairperson of the CBC Amany Asfour said through the LSPP, food suppliers will be trained on key standard requirements and food safety management systems.

She said this was necessary for them to competitively integrate into the supply chains of the hospitality and other potential markets for the SME businesses.

“Active participation of SMEs or businesses in national and regional value chains remains very limited,” Asfour said.

“Most businesses face various challenges in meeting this intent, key of which is the future to meet standard requirements of the expected product and service, access to finance and other supply side and production related constraints.”

She added that the LSPP would also focus on market linkages integrating the agro-food supplies into supply chains once they have been trained.

The CBC has also entered into agreements with hotels namely Serena Group of Hotels in Kampala, Kenya and Rwanda as well as Protea Uganda and Zambia to facilitate this market linkage.

The result of this programme is to encourage companies to source within the region from efficiently managed and standardised SME suppliers and in turn access inputs faster and cheaper.

“This project is an innovative strategy to ensure public private partnerships and SME participation in regional value chains. The multiplier effect of such partnerships will be employment creation, quality and standards improvement and overall competitiveness of the industry.

“This is the direction we as the private sector in Africa should be taking if we’re to become more sustainable players in the global market,” Asfour explained.

Acting Comesa secretary general Ambassador Kipyego Cheluget, who officially opened the meeting, affirmed Comesa’s commitment to work with the private sector in promoting SME development, the private sector and sustainable development for regional integration.

He described the CBC LSPP as commendable and a practical approach which will ensure intended goals are met. — Comesa.intel

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