Chemonics International is an international development consulting firm actively operating in Uganda across diverse sectors. Here's a detailed overview:
Feed the Future Uganda Youth Leadership for Agriculture (YLA): A $21.5 million USAID-funded initiative from 2015–2020, designed to empower youth in agribusiness through leadership training and mentorship.
Enabling Environment for Agriculture (EEA): Worked to eliminate policy and regulatory barriers, bolstered government capacity to enhance agricultural trade.
Market Systems Strengthening: Helped launch digital solutions (e.g., Akorion platform) linking smallholder farmers to services and market information.
Support Reach: Initiatives aim to uplift the productivity and resilience of over 600,000 farmers, pastoralists, focused significantly on women and youth.
Technical assistance roles: Chemonics recruits local and expatriate experts to strengthen health commodity supply chains — enhancing governance, workforce, info systems, and public–private linkages.
CBCR project: A five-year USAID-funded effort in Amudat to support community-based cancer resources (in partnership with ACDI-VOCA).
Private sector investments: Active in Uganda’s agriculture and renewable energy sectors, collaborating with stakeholders like the Uganda Investment Authority and Ministry of Finance. These efforts connect regional investors and mobilize private capital.
Energy & infrastructure: Involved in regional pipeline and renewable‑energy dialogues, including projects linking Uganda with Kenya, Rwanda, and South Sudan.
Supports projects that shape agricultural governance (e.g., Grain Council partnerships) and build institutional recipe across sectors.
Has delivered supply chain technical assistance involving multiple Ugandan state actors and local organizations.
Active in broader transparency and private-sector working group forums — forging policy shifts and cross-sector accountability .
Maintains a Kampala office and hires Ugandan and expat staff on technical and leadership roles.
Uses local partnerships heavily — collaborating with government ministries, private sector players, and community-based organizations to deliver lasting impact.
Youth agriculture: Over five years, the YLA initiative embedded leadership in youth agribusinesss.
Women-centered nutrition: Promoted inclusion in programs like Aunt Porridge—a nutritious food enterprise fostering women-led agribusiness.
Digital market access: Tools to connect farmers practically to supply services and price info .
Health supply chain: Bolstered national availability of essential medicines through fortified systems .