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Partnering for impact: Five lessons for organizations ready to champion women farmers

ArticlesApr 20, 2026

By Tracey Duffey, Global Head of Partnerships, ofi


Inside ofi and GIZ’s model for high-impact, inclusive partnerships

This year, as FAO marks Year of the Woman Farmer, I’ve been reflecting on what partnership looks like when it genuinely moves the needle for women.

From where I sit at ofi, working across markets and value chains every day, it’s clear that we cannot achieve resilient, climate smart, commercially viable supply chains without investing in the women who hold them together.

As farmers, workers, traders, and technical specialists, women are custodians of soils, water, biodiversity, and household food security. Yet, when they’re excluded from the resources that drive productivity and income, it directly undermines the quality and volume of what we can source.

Our multiyear collaboration with Germany’s leading development agency Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH (GIZ) has given us a front row seat to what effective partnership design looks like when the goal is to change that reality.

Together, we’re investing €10 million in 12 programs to support 83,000 smallholder farmers - including 28,000 women - to build stronger livelihoods and take part in more resilient, compliant, higher-value supply chains.

And while no two partnerships are identical, I believe there are five lessons that can serve any organization serious about empowering women farmers at scale.


1. Anchor the partnership in a shared problem you’re both motivated to solve

At the outset, both of our organizations recognized something fundamental. Gender inequality is more than a social concern; it’s a structural weakness in agricultural supply chains. When women lack access to land, training, finance, or climate smart resources, whole communities and sourcing networks lose productivity, resilience, and future competitiveness.

The UN estimates that if women smallholders had equal access to resources with men, production would rise by 20-30% per cent, feeding an extra 100–150 million people and reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 2.1 gigatons through improved farm practices by 2050i.

Our own experience echoes the numbers. Women coffee farmers for example, often perform specialized care-taking tasks on farms like soil and water management, pest control, and processing, making them particularly well placed to adopt new climate-smart technologies and practices at scale. But they still lack the resources and decision-making power needed to succeed.

This shared understanding became the foundation for one of our largest and most ambitious public private partnerships to date. With GIZ, we’re strengthening extension services, infrastructure, certification, and targeted training for smallholders with a goal to uplift 28,000 women in ofi’s black pepper, cashew, cocoa, coffee, and hazelnut supply chains.

The partnership also advances ofi’s wider ambition - aligned with FAO’s Commit to Grow Equality (CGE) initiative - to support 250,000 women farmers to improve their livelihoods by 2030 under our Choices for Change strategy.

My advice: Start with the problem, not the activities, and make sure it matters to both sides commercially, socially, and strategically.


2. Design around complementary strengths

Partnerships thrive when each organization brings something distinct to the table.

In this case, GIZ contributes technical expertise and decades of experience promoting sustainable and inclusive development in rural communities worldwide. ofi brings a global sourcing network, local presence, and trust in farming communities to build programs with real-world viability. On the ground, both organizations play an active implementation role, each leading where we have the deepest reach.

Strong communities depend on support systems for health, nutrition, education, youth empowerment, and social protection - areas beyond ofi's core strengths. Which is why we seek partners who bring the deep social-sector expertise our field delivery model is not designed to deliver.

Our HEART Türkiye partnership with GIZ and local NGO Health Right Association shows how complementary strengths can close critical gaps. ofi sources hazelnuts from Türkiye’s Black Sea region, where seasonal migrant women workers spend up to nine months moving between crops. While ofi has worked for many years to improve temporary living conditions with mobile toilets, showers, and hygiene facilities, women still lack preventive care and health information during their migration. Through a 15-month program, partners will reach about 5,000 women with reproductive health education, screenings, culturally tailored resources, and a portable health and nutrition handbook.

"Through our collaboration with ofi, we bring together complementary expertise to strengthen women’s economic participation in agricultural supply chains. By combining GIZ’s development knowledge and local presence with ofi’s market access and sourcing networks, we scale practical solutions that empower women farmers and reinforce resilient communities."

Birte Jaster GIZ Key Account Manager
Birte Jaster

Key Account Manager at GIZ

My advice: Be honest about what you’re good at and what you’re not. Build your partnership model so each actor leads where they have reach, influence, and expertise.


3. Co-create solutions that tackle root causes, not just symptoms

The constraints women face aren’t ‘women’s problems’; they’re systemic barriers that disproportionately affect women. That’s why our program design pairs training sessions with community‑level interventions that aim to influence household decision‑making, shift social norms, and strengthen male allyship.

Across our 12 programs, three priorities stand out:

Cashew apple ghana
  • Unlocking access to finance and higher value markets: Targeted training in Good Agricultural Practices, regenerative agriculture, post-harvest management, and EUDR readiness gives women the tools to participate in compliant, more resilient, and higher value supply chains. Access to finance matters just as much. Women across many producing regions are routinely excluded from formal financial systems by requirements that were not designed with them in mind.

  • Embedding women’s economic agency and entrepreneurship: Village Savings and Loans Associations and women-led cooperatives create enterprise pathways, including support for 1,250 women in Cambodia and Ghana to develop cashew apple microbusinesses.

  • Addressing unsafe or exclusionary working environments: Health screenings for seasonal hazelnut workers in Türkiye, improving working conditions for women in cashew processing, and gender inclusive vocational training in Brazil, all work towards enabling women to participate with dignity and security.

Effective programs are also designed with local needs in mind. Our field teams see the challenges women face and co create solutions with them, not for them. Place women farmers at the centre of your design process to co-create solutions that are culturally aligned, technically viable, and scalable.

My advice: Training matters, but to generate lasting impact, partnerships must target the systems that hold women back, not just the challenges those systems create.


4. Scalability depends on long-term, multi-stakeholder commitment

Impact at scale requires long-term vision, consistent funding, and strong operational partnerships. Our 12 programs span nine regions over 2-4 years, bringing in private sector allies, NGOs, farmer organizations, local institutions, and global partners. They each strengthen different parts of the value chain to expand the scope of impact and prioritize commercial viability.

Timeline 1 01 00 02 21 square

In Ecuador, ofi and GIZ are joined by customers including Mars and international NGO Rikolto to support 2,800 cocoa farmers – at least 20% of them women – to shift to low carbon production systems. Since launching in April 2024, over 580 women have participated in farmer field schools to learn regenerative agriculture techniques, including growing cocoa alongside other crops to boost yields, diversify incomes, and lower emissions.

The project is also opening new economic opportunities through communal nurseries and bio factories where women produce and sell seedlings and farm inputs. It shows how livelihoods, gender equity, and climate resilience intersect to make cocoa production more resilient and commercially viable in the long run.

“Strategic alliances between public and private sectors are crucial for developing and implementing strategies that help farmers adapt to climate crisis. GIZ is joining forces with ofi in Ecuador, leveraging their existing relationships with cocoa farmers, and digital tools to improve productivity more sustainably, increase incomes while meeting social and environmental criteria, such as reducing carbon emissions.”

Ralf Buss 2025 square
Ralf Buss

Project Manager, AgriChains Ecuador, GIZ

My advice: Treat your partnership as a platform and create space for others to join.


5. Measure, demonstrate and communicate impact

This is one of the most important yet often under prioritized elements of any partnership. Credible numbers, such as 132,000 women in ofi supply chains supported through programs in 2025, demonstrates progress and helps mobilize new partners. But meaningful reporting must go further.

For our programs with GIZ, reporting typically includes six-month or annual progress updates and a final project report with country-level insights feeding into broader global indicators. This creates a balanced picture of quantitative results and qualitative lessons.

Over time, I want us to improve how ofi’s origin teams set reporting expectations with partners, integrate communications needs, and surface more human stories to bring the quantitative data to life.

But for now, there are several key practices based on my experience that can consistently strengthen reporting:

  • Align early on what success looks like with co defined KPIs and intended outcomes

  • Co-create a simple, shared reporting framework to keep teams aligned and make data comparable across regions

  • Pair data with lived experience to show both scale and purpose

  • Tailor insights to the needs of different stakeholders to improve clarity and relevance

  • Be transparent with farmers and communities about the use of their data

  • Share challenges as openly as achievements to drive improvement and credibility

  • Treat reporting as a learning engine, not a compliance exercise with reflection moments like quarterly reviews, learning sessions, and field team check-ins

My advice: Communicate outcomes clearly and compellingly to give your partnership momentum.


A call to action for the Year of the Woman Farmer

In every region where we work, I’ve seen the same truth. When women farmers have greater economic agency, entire communities tend to become more resilient and supply chains more dependable. Partnering to empower women farmers is therefore a strategic investment.

Let’s make this year a turning point. We’re inviting donors, companies, investors, and implementing partners to work alongside ofi to co-design, co-finance, and scale proven models.

Together, we can accelerate inclusive growth and build more resilient, climate-smart, and commercially viable supply chains. The question isn’t whether investing in women is worth it. It is whether the sector will build the partnerships required to capture the opportunity.


Notes to Editors

i UNDP: What does gender equality have to do with climate change?

About GIZ (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH)

GIZ is a federal enterprise with more than 50 years’ experience in international cooperation. It promotes economic development and employment, are committed to supporting energy and the environment, and work for peace and security, particularly in fragile contexts.

www.giz.de/en/about-us

About ofi

ofi (olam food ingredients) is an operating group born out of Olam. ofi offers natural, value-added food products and ingredients, including those sourced through sustainability programs and initiatives, so that consumers can enjoy the healthy and indulgent products they love. It consists of industry-leading businesses of cocoa, coffee, dairy, nuts, and spices. ofi has built a unique global value chain presence including its own farming operations, farm-gate origination, and manufacturing facilities. ofi partners with customers, leveraging its complementary and differentiated portfolio of ‘on-trend’ food products, to co-create solutions that anticipate and meet changing consumer preferences as demand increases for healthier food that’s traceable and sustainable. To subscribe to the ofi newsroom, please visit www.ofi.com/news-and-events (privacy statement here). If you do not wish to receive information from ofi please contact media@ofi.com.

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