In the 2010 fiscal year IFC provided $75 million in long-term financing
to Mriya, Ukraine’s seventh-largest agricultural producer, to help it
double production of wheat and other agricultural commodities.
As one of the world’s leading grain exporters, Ukraine plays a major
role in the global food supply chain. About 90 percent of Ukraine’s land
base is suitable for agricultural production and the country has
historically been one of the largest food producers and a major
exporter. Agriculture currently contributes 10 percent of Ukraine's GDP
and employs 20 percent of the population.
But Ukraine’s agribusiness sector faces several constraints.
Adverse weather conditions can curtail production and hurt farmers’
incomes and long-term financing for food production is scarce. That's
why IFC is helping Ukraine become a more significant food supplier by
working with agribusinesses across the supply chain to overcome these
constraints. In fiscal year 2010, IFC invested about $161 million in
Ukraine’s agribusiness sector.
“IFC’s funding is crucial for us to be able to grow our business,
improve the efficiency of our operations, and contribute to the
development of Ukraine’s agricultural sector,” said Mriya CEO Mykola
Guta.
The IFC investment will help the company increase its production volumes
two-to-three-fold and expand land under cultivation from 150,000
hectares in 2009 to 315,000 hectares by 2012. The expansion of farming
operations and grain-storage infrastructure also will help create
hundreds of new rural jobs.
IFC has also helped farmers in Ukraine gain better access to insurance
products that offset the risks of crop loss from poor weather and other
hazards. Our Agri-Insurance Development Project, launched in 2008 in
partnership with the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA),
aims to improve the quality of products offered by insurance companies
and build a regulatory environment that facilitates the offering of such
products.
Natalia Gudyma, president of the League of Insurance Organizations of
Ukraine, says the project contributes to the “improvement of the
insurance culture, knowledge and development of Ukraine’s national
agri-insurance system, and prevents unfair competition.” The growing
availability of insurance products does more than mitigate risks for
farmers—it also makes it easier for them to obtain bank financing,
because banks are more likely to provide loans when they know farmers’
crops are insured against losses.
Recent progress in the project includes IFC’s participation in the
development of a new law, expected to be passed later this year, which
would pave the way for public-private partnerships in agri-insurance,
thus enabling a wider rollout of agri-insurance products. The project
has also played a key role establishing an association of agri-insurance
companies, the first initiative of its kind in Ukraine.