African Development Bank (HQ)

EOI - Digital Identity for Smallholder Farmers to Access Agricultural Services (DIFAS) in Kenya, Nigeria, and Tanzania - AHAI

Last update: Dec 10, 2024 Last update: Dec 10, 2024

Details

Location:Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania
Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania
Grantmaking entity type:Multilateral organization
Status:Closed
Budget: USD 14,300,000
Award ceiling:N/A
Award floor:N/A
Sector:ICT & Telecommunications, Private Sector & Trade, Agriculture & Rural Development
Languages:English
Eligible applicants:Private Sector
Eligible citizenships:Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania
Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania
Date posted: Dec 10, 2024

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Associated Awards

Description

EOI - Digital Identity for Smallholder Farmers to Access Agricultural Services (DIFAS) in Kenya, Nigeria, and Tanzania - AHAI Consultant type: Firm Consultant Consultant location: Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania Publication date: 10-Dec-2024 Closing Date: 05-Jan
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grant Background

About the Funding Agency

The African Development Bank is a regional multilateral development finance institution, established in 1963, with a mandate to further economic development and social progress of African countries, individually and collectively. 80 member countries including all the 54 African countries and 26 non-African countries in the Americas, Europe and Asia own the Bank. 

The Bank's principal functions include:
  1. using its resources for the financing of investment projects and programs relating to the economic and social development of its Regional Member Countries (RMCs);
  2. the provision of technical assistance for the preparation and execution of development projects and programs;
  3. promoting investment in Africa of public and private capital for development purposes; and (iv) to respond to requests for assistance in coordinating development policies and plans of RMCs. In its operations, the Bank is also required to give special attention to projects and programs that promote regional integration.
The Bank began its operations from its headquarters, in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire on July 1, 1966. For the purpose of its operations, the Bank also maintains Regional Resource Centers and Field Offices within RMCs.
 
For projects financed by the Bank resources, the charter requires suppliers for contracts for institutional activities and projects to be nationals of a member country. Only bidders from a member country of the Bank are eligible to participate in the procurement process. For goods to be eligible, they must originate from a member country.

About the Sectors

ICT & Telecommunications

Features information and communication technologies, digital systems, and telecommunications infrastructure and services.


Key areas:
  • ICT systems, software, and digital solutions
  • Telecommunications networks and services
  • Digitalization, data, and communication tools

Private Sector & Trade

Entails initiatives that promote entrepreneurship, strengthen competitive markets, and expand domestic and international trade opportunities.


Key areas:
  • Private sector development and SME/MSME support
  • Entrepreneurship, start-ups, and business growth initiatives
  • Trade facilitation, import/export, and market access
  • Commerce, retail/wholesale, and free trade mechanisms

Locations

Kenya

Kenya has positioned infrastructure investment as a pillar of its development strategy, deploying public funds and innovative financing to expand roads, ports, rail networks and energy systems that enable trade and productivity. Under a World Bank–supported PPP framework, Kenya has strengthened legal and institutional capacity to mobilise private capital for infrastructure across sectors including transport, water and housing, widening access to services and supporting economic transformation.

Nr. of tenders: 24642
Nr. of grants: 4256
Nr. of donors: 850
Nr. of jobs: 166

Nigeria

Nigeria’s development trajectory increasingly emphasises large-scale infrastructure investment to support economic diversification and reduce dependence on oil revenues. Expansion of rail networks, highways, power generation and digital connectivity seeks to improve productivity across Africa’s largest economy. Reforms targeting electricity markets, public-private partnerships and regulatory transparency aim to attract private capital and enhance project efficiency. However, implementation gaps, fiscal pressures and governance challenges continue to influence the pace and quality of infrastructure delivery.

Nr. of tenders: 22084
Nr. of grants: 3843
Nr. of donors: 874
Nr. of jobs: 238
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