Leadway Assurance Partners AGRA on ‘Pay at Harvest’ Crop Insurance Scheme

In a significant step towards deepening agricultural resilience across Nigeria, Leadway Assurance Company Limited has entered into a strategic partnership with the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) through a $399,900 grant initiative to implement the “Building Farmers’ Resilience through Innovative Insurance Models and Financial Instruments” project.

AGRA is an African institution supporting inclusive agricultural transformation and sustainable food systems. This three-year initiative, running from March 2025 to March 2028, aims to transform the livelihoods of 21,000 smallholder farmers (SHFs) across Kaduna, Nasarawa, and Niger States.

Climate change continues to escalate risks for Nigerian farmers, manifesting in unpredictable rainfall, prolonged droughts, extremely high lethal temperatures and increased crop failure. This volatility threatens national food security/systems and undermines years of agricultural progress. Recognising the scale of this challenge, Leadway Assurance has taken a bold step forward, championing innovative risk management strategies tailored to the realities of rural agriculture.

At the heart of the new intervention is the “Pay at Harvest” insurance scheme, an innovative premium collection model that enables farmers to defer insurance payments until after harvest, when liquidity is more assured. This approach lowers the financial barriers to insurance enrollment, increases uptake among SHFs, and embeds resilience within the agricultural value chain.

“Pay at Harvest” empowers farmers to protect their livelihoods without upfront costs, ensuring they can bounce back from climate-related losses and secure credit, inputs, and market access with greater confidence.

This new grant builds upon Leadway Assurance’s successful three-year partnership with Heifer International, under which over 60,000 smallholder farmers benefited from the “Pay at Harvest” model. The current AGRA-funded and sponsored project goes a step further by offering a more holistic package, including access to off-takers and market linkages, extension services and climate-smart agronomy support, digital mapping of farmlands for enhanced monitoring and accountability, timely early warning systems for extreme weather events, scalable farmer education programs to promote financial literacy and climate-smart practices, and expanding public-private collaborations for unlocking innovative finance, including green climate finance, for crop insurance.

To deliver on this ambitious vision, Leadway Assurance will work alongside expert partners, Verdure Climate – supporting climate risk analytics, PULA – offering tech-enabled agricultural insurance solutions, Rural Country Integrated Services Ltd. – field implementation partner, National Agricultural Development Fund (NADF) and Heifer International – unlocking catalytic finance for SHFs.

By 2028, the initiative also aims to facilitate $10 million in agricultural credit, launch 6 new financial products tailored to smallholder farmer needs and disseminate 4 knowledge products to drive broader sectoral adoption.

Commenting on the initiative, Head, Agribusiness, Leadway Assurance, Mr. Fatona Ayoola described the partnership with AGRA as a decisive moment for agricultural risk management in Nigeria. “By bringing bespoke parametric insurance solutions to underserved communities who are vulnerable to the negative impact of climate change and aligning them with broader value chain interventions, we are not only protecting livelihoods but also rebuilding trust in farming as a viable business for rural Nigerians.”

According to Dr. Rufus Idris, Country Director at AGRA, “for Nigeria’s agricultural transformation and food security efforts to succeed amid increased climate uncertainty, insurance needs to work better in helping smallholder farmers protect their farmlands and crops from climate change shocks (flood, draught, pest and diseases, etc.). Hence, this project aims to help build on a proven model and catalyze resources for a wider access to insurance and adoption by smallholder farmers.”

 

 

 

Hot this week

Harmony Group CEO, Olusegun Adebayo, Bets on Lekki Growth with Launch of New Housing Projects

As demand for quality housing continues to rise across...

Mother Nature Is Speaking. Are We Listening?

Over the past few days, Lagos has witnessed severe...

Lagos Flooding Sparks Fresh Interest in Safer Property Investments as Experts Set for Three P Conference

The widespread flooding that recently disrupted homes, businesses and...

Nigeria’s Nuclear Ambitions Boosted as Akkuyu NPP Unit 1 Construction is Completed

Nigeria is steadily advancing toward the development of its...

NHIA, ‎PTAD, Universal Insurance Sponsor NAIPE 2026 AGM

‎The National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA),‎ Pension Transitional Arrangement...

Topics

Nigerian Content Level Hits 56% as Ministers, Stakeholders Hail NCDMB on Developmental Initiatives

The Executive Secretary, NCDMB, Engr. Felix Omatsola Ogbe explaining...

IATA: Airlines Set for $119bn Loss in 2020 over COVID-19 Pandemic

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced a revised...

Huawei Revenue Jumps 40% in First Half of 2016

China's Huawei has reported a 40 percent rise in...

Polaris Bank Provides Free Breast Cancer Screening for 250 Nigerian Women

Polaris Bank, Nigeria’s leading digital retail commercial Bank, has...

Shareholders Lament Foreign Acquisition of Local Insurance Firms  

  L-R: Welfare Officer, Independent Shareholders Association of Nigeria (ISAN),...

Digital Identity Will Foster Economic Growth – Interswitch Boss

Nigeria can unlock its full economic potentials if majority...

1bn Women Worldwide Lack Access to Financial System

$300bn Financing Gap Between Men & Women. Financial exclusion remains a major constraint for women, particularly in developing countries. More than one billion women still do not use or have access to the financial system, according to the World Bank Group’s latest Global Findex Report. IFC has estimated that worldwide, a $300 billion gap in financing exists for formal, women-owned small businesses, and more than 70 percent of women-owned small and medium enterprises have inadequate or no access to financial services.

‘Oando Co-operating with SEC on Investigation’

Oando Plc says it is actively co-operating the Securities...