Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO): Regional Office for Africa |

Youth: The Engine to Power Sustainable Agricultural Mechanization in Africa?

With the right financing, skills development and enabling policies, young entrepreneurs can power a more productive, inclusive and food-secure future for the continent

ACCRA, Ghana, March 10, 2026/APO Group/ --

When the rains arrive across much of sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), farmers have only a short window to prepare their land. Miss that window, and yields fall. Harvest too late, and crops are lost. Across the region, these delays are common; not for lack of labour, but for lack of access to affordable and scale-appropriate machinery. At the same time, millions of young Africans are searching for decent work. 

This is the paradox shaping Africa’s agrifood system: the world’s youngest population farming with some of the least mechanized systems. Africa holds around half of the world’s arable land and also presents the largest yield gap. Approximately 65 percent of farm power in sub-Saharan Africa still comes from human labour, while engine power accounts for only about 10 percent. 

What if a key solution to youth unemployment can simultaneously tackle the farm productivity challenge? 

A triple-win solution 

At the first Africa Regional Conference on Sustainable Agricultural Mechanization (ACSAM), held in Dar es Salaam in February 2026, policymakers, private sector actors and youth representatives converged around a growing consensus: Sustainable Agricultural Mechanization (SAM) must move beyond large equipment schemes and instead promote scale-appropriate machinery delivered through viable service businesses. 

SAM is applicable across all segments of value chains – from production to consumption – and covers technologies ranging from simple and basic hand tools to more sophisticated and motorized equipment. Scale-appropriate machinery includes two-wheel tractors, planters, threshers, small harvesters, irrigation pumps and post-harvest processing equipment adapted to smallholder systems. These technologies are more affordable, easier to maintain and better suited to fragmented landholdings. 

However, the opportunity lies not only in the machines themselves but also in who operates them. Under the hire services approach, young entrepreneurs invest in machinery and provide services – land preparation, planting, harvesting, shelling/threshing, drying or processing – to farmers on a fee-for-service basis.  

Farmers gain timely access to machinery without the burden of ownership. Youth gain a business model that does not depend on owning land. Governments advance food security goals without expanding costly and often underperforming tractor subsidy schemes. 

Why youth? 

SSA has the world’s youngest and fastest growing population which is projected to double by 2050. Millions of young people enter the labour market every year, with limited formal employment opportunities available. Agriculture remains the primary livelihood opportunity for the youth and is capable of absorbing labour at scale, but only if it becomes more productive and profitable. 

Mechanization services lower some of the barriers faced by youth seeking to enter the sector. These services do not require land ownership. They can be structured through leasing arrangements to lower upfront costs. They can integrate digital booking platforms to connect farmers and service providers. And they respond to a clear market demand: farmers need timely operations. 

Young people, often more comfortable with digital tools and innovation, are well positioned to lead this transformation. 

Gains for women and children 

Women play a central role in African agriculture, comprising 45 percent of farmers and 54 percent of those employed in off-farm agrifood systems. In some countries, women provide up to 80 percent of the total farm labour. For women farmers in particular, access to mechanized services can significantly reduce the time and physical effort required for activities such as land preparation, planting, harvesting and processing. This reduction in labour burden not only improves productivity but also frees time for other income-generating activities, education and household responsibilities. By reducing the need for labour-intensive farm tasks, mechanization services can also contribute to lowering the reliance on child labour in agriculture while supporting more productive and resilient rural livelihoods. 

Identifying the opportunities 

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) sees clear, practical entry points to accelerate youth engagement in sustainable agricultural mechanization.  

First, capacity-building that combines technical training with business development and mentorship. There is a need to support incubation, creation and acceleration of enterprises, based on robust appraisals of local opportunities.  

Second, affordable finance must be unlocked through innovative leasing models and risk-sharing partnerships which make scale-appropriate machinery accessible to young entrepreneurs. At the same time, digital tools that are creating jobs while transforming how mechanization services reach farmers must be replicated or scaled across rural Africa. Platforms such as Hello Tractor and Trotro Tractor demonstrate how such tools can increase equipment utilization, improve transparency and strengthen business viability. 

Expanding maintenance networks, spare parts supply chains, and local manufacturing and assembly capacity can boost sustainability, reduce downtime and create additional technical jobs. 

Finally, national mechanization policies must be aligned with continental frameworks advanced by the African Union Commission such as the Framework for Sustainable Agricultural Mechanization in Africa (F-SAMA). Policies must address systemic issues and create structured pathways to turn machinery into profitable, resilient businesses. 

A moment of opportunity 

Scale-appropriate mechanization is about more than higher yields. It reduces drudgery, cuts post-harvest losses, strengthens rural enterprises and builds resilience across agrifood systems. At a time when Africa’s youth population is rapidly expanding, this transition offers a powerful alignment of opportunity and necessity. With the right financing, skills development and enabling policies, young entrepreneurs can power a more productive, inclusive and food-secure future for the continent. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO): Regional Office for Africa.