Close Menu
Vincent AmedzakeVincent Amedzake
    What's Hot

    UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship

    September 11, 2025

    Efforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue

    July 13, 2025

    Ghana National Research Fund Capable of Becoming a Springboard for National Development – Inaugural Chair Prof. Danquah

    July 11, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship
    • Efforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue
    • Ghana National Research Fund Capable of Becoming a Springboard for National Development – Inaugural Chair Prof. Danquah
    • What Ghanaian Universities Can Learn from Imperial College’s Innovation Ecosystem
    • Healing Beyond Words: The UG Researcher on a Mission to Bridge Medicine and Sign Language for Inclusive Healthcare and Education
    • Cash in Crisis: Rethinking Africa’s Payment Systems Amid Growing Disruptions
    • ‘We Don’t Have Employment and We Don’t Have Support from Home,’ IDPs Say
    • Collaboration over Competition: An untold Media Perspective on Covering Ghana’s 2024 Elections – Daniel Sackitey writes
    Friday, September 12
    Vincent Amedzake
    • Home
    • About Me
    • Vincent’s Folder
      • News
      • Opinions
      • Articles
    • Agric-Info Hub
    • Scholarly Scribbles
    • Ghana Insights
    • #TheProfile
    • Tales Uncensored
    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Vincent AmedzakeVincent Amedzake
    Home » UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship
    Agric-Info Hub

    UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship

    Vincent AmedzakeBy Vincent AmedzakeSeptember 11, 2025Updated:September 11, 20255 Views

    Across many fronts, fresh debates on agrifood systems are gaining momentum, driven by what experts say is the need to rethink regulation, spur innovation and recognise the role of food in sustaining livelihoods and economies.

    That conversation took centre stage at a recent one-day policy dialogue convened by the UG Nkabom Collaborative to bridge gaps between regulators and agrifood entrepreneurs. The gathering sought to tackle systemic challenges that frustrate innovation while unlocking opportunities for young people in Ghana’s food systems.

    Held under the theme “Policy in Practice: Southern Belt Stakeholder Dialogue on Agrifood Regulation and Youth Enterprises”, the event drew participants from academia, regulatory agencies, private sector players and youth-led businesses across the Greater Accra, Central, Western, Western North, Eastern, Volta and Oti regions.

    Among the institutions represented were the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Food and Drugs Authority (FDA), Ghana Standards Authority (GSA), Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT), Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA), Ghana Enterprises Agency (GEA) and the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC).

    What united them was a shared concern about how to make Ghana’s food systems safer, more sustainable and fertile ground for youth enterprise and job creation.

    In setting the tone for the policy dialogue on behalf of Principal Investigator Prof. Richmond Aryeetey, Dr. Hayford Ayerakwa, Pillar Lead for Education on the UG Nkabom Collaborative, provided an overview of the initiative and its three-pronged focus areas, including Education, Access and Success, and Entrepreneurship. He explained that through the Education Pillar, the Collaborative promotes experiential learning opportunities for young people, anchored in climate-smart, indigenous and nutrition-rich agrifood practices.

    Dr. Hayford Ayerakwa, Pillar Lead for Education on the UG Nkabom Collaborative //PC: UG_PAD

    The Access and Success Pillar, he noted, seeks to open up higher education training in nutrition and agrifood systems to women, persons with disabilities and other underrepresented groups, while the Entrepreneurship Pillar equips young people with the knowledge, skills and networks to build and scale sustainable agrifood businesses.

    Dr. Ayerakwa stressed that food systems must be understood in broader terms and urged stakeholders to rethink agriculture as a value chain that begins long before seeds are sown and extends well beyond the dining table. “Agricultural production should not be limited to food for consumption,” he said. “We need to consider pre-production, production and post-production stages and the opportunities each presents for entrepreneurs and investors. The value chain has multiple points of entry and we must ensure that women, young people, persons with disabilities and other vulnerable groups can access the support needed to leverage these opportunities.”

    Building on this vision, the Collaborative has set out a decade-long plan to empower young people with the skills and resources to transform raw ideas into viable agribusinesses. One example of this effort is the Nkabom Bootcamp, which is nurturing agrifood startups with the potential to scale up. Ms. Sylvia Nyarko, Project Assistant at UG Nkabom and Programmes Lead at the University of Ghana Business School’s Entrepreneurship Hub (UGBS NEST), during the session revealed that from over 160 applicants, 100 participants have already been selected.

    Ms. Sylvia Nyarko //PC: UG_PAD

    “We are now at the idea development stage, after which the top 50 and then 20 will be chosen for targeted support to refine and scale their concepts,” Ms. Nyarko explained. The goal, she added, is ambitious and is geared towards creating more than 9,000 direct jobs and widening opportunities for young people across the country.

    A key concern for stakeholders, revealed during a presentation by Prof. Justice Bawole, Policy Lead with the Collaborative, was the thorny issue of regulation faced by young agrifood entrepreneurs.

    Drawing on research with startups under the Collaborative, he outlined a host of challenges, ranging from licensing and certification processes that stretch over months, conflicting requirements between agencies such as the FDA and GSA and separate compliance demands from MoFA and the EPA that duplicate efforts and slow progress.

    Prof. Justice Bawole, Policy Lead//PC: UG_PAD

    He added that “these hurdles are further compounded by high compliance costs, multiple layers of taxation, and inconsistent enforcement. In some cases, companies face strict monitoring, while others bypass regulations through political connections or unofficial payments, creating an uneven playing field and eroding trust in the system.”

    Prof. Bawole noted that early education on legal frameworks and regulatory processes could help entrepreneurs avoid costly mistakes and delays.  He, however, stressed that lasting change would require regulators to harmonise standards, streamline processes and work more closely with industry players to build a food systems sector that genuinely supports youth-led enterprises and job creation.

    Responding to the concerns, Ing. Rachel Amanfu, Chief Scientific Officer at the Ghana Standards Authority, admitted the issues surrounding fragmented regulatory processes but noted that agencies are now working to address them. She explained that many of the challenges entrepreneurs face stem from limited knowledge of the right procedures, which often results in wrong labelling, incomplete product standards and delays in certification.

    Ing. Rachel Amanfu, Chief Scientific Officer at the Ghana Standards Authority //PC: UG_PAD 

    She further revealed that steps are underway to harmonise services across the GSA, FDA and ORC so that, in the near future, a single application could serve multiple agencies, an initiative aimed at easing the burden on startups and improving efficiency.

    The dialogue opened the door to a broad consensus that Ghana’s food systems can no longer operate in silos and as such, regulators, entrepreneurs and academics must work together to ensure that policies encourage rather than stifle innovation.

    The UG Nkabom Collaborative, housed at the University of Ghana, is positioning itself at the heart of that effort by leveraging research, training, dialogue and partnerships to make food systems more inclusive, resilient and youth-driven.

    Progress is already evident in the form of strengthened linkages between innovators and regulators and in new opportunities being created for young entrepreneurs within the agrifood sector. The next steps would involve how to sustain these gains by ensuring policies are reformed and consistently applied by building structures that outlast individual projects or programmes.

    With steady commitment and continuity, the Collaborative has the potential to reshape Ghana’s food landscape, moving it beyond nourishment to become a platform for innovation, decent work and sustainable growth.

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
    Previous ArticleEfforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue
    Vincent Amedzake
    • Facebook
    • X (Twitter)
    • LinkedIn

    Communications Specialist skilled in strategic communication, public relations, journalism, digital marketing strategies, and research, with a passion for storytelling. My goal is to leverage my expertise to drive impactful communication campaigns, advance organizational missions, and tell compelling brand stories. I have a special focus on agriculture, SDGs, migration, research, youth development, and other relevant subjects across Ghana and Africa.

    Related Posts

    Ghana National Research Fund Capable of Becoming a Springboard for National Development – Inaugural Chair Prof. Danquah

    July 11, 2025

    What Ghanaian Universities Can Learn from Imperial College’s Innovation Ecosystem

    July 8, 2025

    Cash in Crisis: Rethinking Africa’s Payment Systems Amid Growing Disruptions

    June 3, 2025
    Demo
    Top Posts

    Displaced Women in Ghana Face Gender-Based Violence, Economic Hardships, Study Reveals

    November 28, 2024162 Views

    Efforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue

    July 13, 2025154 Views

    Modernization of TVET Training Crucial for Ghana’s Development, Says Seloart CEO

    June 9, 202433 Views

    Cash in Crisis: Rethinking Africa’s Payment Systems Amid Growing Disruptions

    June 3, 202532 Views
    Don't Miss

    UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship

    September 11, 20255 Views

    Across many fronts, fresh debates on agrifood systems are gaining momentum, driven by what experts…

    Efforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue

    July 13, 2025

    Ghana National Research Fund Capable of Becoming a Springboard for National Development – Inaugural Chair Prof. Danquah

    July 11, 2025

    What Ghanaian Universities Can Learn from Imperial College’s Innovation Ecosystem

    July 8, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Demo
    About
    About

    Email:info@vincentamedzake.com

    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    UG Nkabom Sparks Fresh Conversation on Food Systems, Regulation and Youth Entrepreneurship

    September 11, 2025

    Efforts to Address Intersecting Forced Displacement Crises Gain Ground as IDRC-Supported Chairs in West Africa Advance Regional Dialogue

    July 13, 2025

    Ghana National Research Fund Capable of Becoming a Springboard for National Development – Inaugural Chair Prof. Danquah

    July 11, 2025
    Most Popular

    Ecobank Ghana PLC Donates Second Batch of 100 Laptops to Support UG’s 1S1L Initiative

    May 14, 20240 Views

    Centre for Migration Studies and International Development Research Centre Partners to launch Project on Forced Displacement in Anglophone West Africa

    April 20, 20241 Views

    IAST Partners French Embassy to Launch Groundbreaking Plastic Recycling Project for Fuel Production in the Osu Community

    April 21, 20241 Views
    © 2025 Vincent Amedzake

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.