2 March 2018

Brewing Connectivity: Mobile technology enables Haitian sorghum farmers to meet Heineken’s quota






In late 2011 when Heineken International bought over Haitis national brewery, Brasserie Nationale dHaïti (BRANA S.A.), local producers and consumers were unsure as to how the change in leadership would affect them. One of the terms was that Heineken would purchase 60% of its ingredients locally, replacing imported malted barley with local sorghum. This created an outstanding yet daunting prospect for Haitian sorghum farmers, as most grew sorghum on small, individual plots and were not equipped to meet the large demands of the international brewing giant.

The creation of SMASH, the Smallholder Alliance for Sorghum in Haiti, rendered tackling this challenge possible. SMASH is a public-private partnership between USAID, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the national Haitian brewery BRANA, S.A. In collaboration with Dimagi, a social enterprise that designs mobile technology for use in low-resource settings, SMASH implemented a mobile application program for sorghum farmers and agricultural extension agents. The application helps extension agents stay in contact with farmers, monitor crop quality, and respond to challenges such as pests and destructive weather. The application also tracks sorghum from the field all the way to the grain storage center in Port-au-Prince, which had initially been seen as one of the major obstacles in verifying and ensuring that the quota would be met. After the introduction of the application, extension agents reported that they experienced a 90% decrease in the time they spent filling out data collection forms, allowing them to spend more time with farmers.

SMASH and its mobile technology program have fostered a sustainable arrangement in which sorghum farmers gained a reliable customer, Heineken followed through on its promise to source local ingredients, and consumers enjoy access to a quality product (in this case, the non-alcoholic nutritional beverage Malta-H). The data collected and generated by the application informs future business decisions for all parties involved and aids in monitoring of both extension and production activities. The next goal on the horizon for SMASH is to shift to a paper-free purchasing process for farmers, which should enhance the speed and verifiability of transactions. SMASH serves as a positive example of the ways in which public and private institutions, smallholder farmers, agricultural extension, and technology developers can coalesce to improve both products and livelihoods in the Caribbean.

Source:

https://www.rti.org/impact/smallholder-alliance-sorghum-haiti-smash