Dear Leaders, Policymakers, and Partners of the Africa Food Systems Forum,
My name is Adja Boudy Kanté. I am 32 years old, a mother, and a proud young entrepreneur from Senegal. I come from Guediawaye, just outside Dakar, and I've dedicated my life to something deeply personal, which is creating nutritious, healthy products made from local cereals that heal and empower.
Why? Because I've seen what poor diets and imported processed foods can do. My parents live with diabetes, and I refused to believe that this was our only future. So, in 2019, I built Cereal House, a company turning traditional African cereals, like millet and sorghum, and super foods like moringa into healthy, accessible products for our families, our youth, and those struggling with chronic illnesses.
We’re not just selling granola. We’re rewriting the story of African food, making it modern, relevant and proudly local.
But behind every granola is a mountain we had to climb. And we’re still climbing. Being a Young Agripreneur in Africa is a true test of resilience. Every day we face:
These aren’t just my problems. They are shared by thousands of young people across the continent trying to build businesses that feed our people and power our economies.
Let me give you one example: A gourmet store in Côte d’Ivoire once reached out after seeing our products online. They were excited to bring Cereal House granola to their shelves. And so was I. The excitement was palpable but short-lived. Between sky-high transport costs, complex customs processes, and unrecognized certifications, the opportunity slipped through my fingers. Not because of demand. But because of the system.
AfCFTA: A Door to a New Future?
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) gives me hope. It could be a bridge between what we are and what we can become. It has the power to:
This isn’t about policy on paper, it's about real change for real people. For me and other young people, this could be the difference between struggling to survive and being able to thrive.
I dream of an Africa where a farmer in Mali can sell her millet in Senegal with ease. Where a processor like me can transform it into a snack in Dakar, and ship it to customers in Rwanda, Côte d’Ivoire, or Zambia without a hundred hurdles.
I dream of an Africa where ‘Buy African’ isn’t a campaign, but a lifestyle. Where our food is proudly on our shelves, in our schools and on our tables. These are my dreams.
To all of you attending the Africa Food Systems Forum, here’s what we need:
We don’t need handouts. We need fair systems, access, and belief.
We have the ideas. We have the energy. We have the will. Give us the tools, and we will feed Africa and the world.
With hope, determination, and deep love for this continent,
Adja Boudy Kante
Founder, Cereal House, Senegal.
Young Agripreneur & Advocate for Healthy, Local African Food.
About the Africa Food Systems Forum 2025
The Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) 2025 is the continent’s premier platform for advancing bold solutions and strategic action to transform Africa’s food systems. This year’s Forum is hosted under the leadership of H.E. Bassirou Diomaye Diakhar FAYE, President of the Republic of Senegal, and will convene policymakers, public and private sector leaders, researchers, youth champions, and development partners from across Africa and beyond. The theme for AFSF 2025 is: “Africa’s Youth Leading Collaboration, Innovation, and Implementation of Agri-Food Systems Transformation.”
This reflects the growing recognition that Africa’s young people are not just beneficiaries of change but drivers of transformation in the agrifood space.
The Mastercard Foundation is deeply engaged in this Forum, hosting curated side events, speaking opportunities (as panelists, key remarks and moderators), and supporting the event attendance for 19 standouts young Agripreneurs.