EAGA Shared Value project assists smallholder farms in East Africa to increase livestock production by providing access to veterinary products.

October 16, 2018

3 Min Read
Elanco works to increase food security in East Africa
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Elanco Animal Health Inc. announced that it is progressing on a groundbreaking project to provide sustainable development solutions to address food insecurity within East Africa in Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda.

The East Africa Growth Accelerator (EAGA) is Elanco’s first pure "Shared Value" project, made possible through a $3.1 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Elanco said in the announcement. The grant enables the registration, manufacturing and distribution of affordable, high-quality veterinary products, along with intensive training initiatives for smallholder farmers and channel partners, the company explained.

“At the intersection of business value and societal value, we find ‘Shared Value.’ The EAGA project is focused on assisting smallholder farming families in East Africa increase livestock production by providing them with access to high-quality, reliable veterinary medicines and knowledge to combat livestock disease,” said Maria Zampaglione, Elanco One Health and Shared Value advisor. “As the project leader, I realize how much supporting these farmers reduces hunger and poverty in a sustainable way, improves their income and livelihoods while opening new market segments for Elanco.”

Dairy farmer Dr. Moses Gitonga, director of Jesmo Agrovet Ltd. in Kenya, a retailer that deals with veterinary and agrochemical products, said, “The EAGA project staff recently visited our dairy farm and business, assisting with training of staff and farmers on the elimination of flies and ectoparasites — a menace in the semi-arid Kajiado County. The intervention has seen a radical decrease in the fly population, and our dairy cows are now at peace during feeding and milking time.

"Tick-borne diseases are now also very rare, and the fly menace affecting households and livestock is effectively controlled. These measures have translated into improved hygiene and livestock production in terms of meat and milk output, significantly impacting the sustainability of our dairy farm and livestock,” he added.

Livestock disease remains a significant threat to achieving food security in East Africa, where 25% of protein from farm animals currently is lost due to animal illness, in turn reducing the supply of high-quality milk, meat and eggs and creating significant economic losses for farmers. According to the U.N. Food & Agriculture Organization, 34% of the people in East Africa are undernourished.

“We have just 12 short years to achieve the U.N.’s Sustainable Development Goal, which is about ending hunger by 2030,” said Julie Lawless, Elanco senior director of corporate affairs. “With global hunger trending up in recent years after a decade of decline, we must increase capability and capacity in developing regions to meet this goal. Supporting smallholder farmers in East Africa is Elanco’s concrete contribution to reduce hunger and poverty in a sustainable way while opening new business growth markets.”

The company’s goal is to enable more than 240,000 dairy and poultry smallholder farmers to access small-sized, quality products by 2020. The grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation further helps achieve this goal of improving the lives of smallholder farmers through sustainable livestock production.

Elanco is a global animal health company that develops products and knowledge services to prevent and treat disease in food animals and pets in more than 90 countries.

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