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$30M USAID Grant Sees Soybean Innovation Through The Last Mile In Africa

The grant recognizes SIL’s nearly 10-year progress toward developing a robust soybean value chain across Sub-Saharan Africa and dedicates additional resources to ensure end-users adopt life-changing new products.

“We’ve done the discovery research, but we need to get end products through the last mile so that soybean farmers all across Sub-Saharan Africa can adopt these technologies,” says Peter Goldsmith, director of the Soybean Innovation Lab and professor in the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at U of I. “Our technology solutions incorporate the product life cycle and directly address acute bottlenecks, such as the lack of seed, persistent low yields, and manual threshing challenges that limit a sustainable soybean value chain in Africa.”

The five-year project marks the initiation of “SIL 3.0,” the latest iteration of USAID-funded soybean value chain research from the center. SIL 3.0 seeks to remove “last-mile” obstacles to localizing technology adoption, including issues around licensing new soybean varieties; productivity-improving technology adoption by soy processors and food manufacturers; and mobilizing credit and investment to support organizations’ capital needs as they deploy these technologies through their large and active networks.  

The Soybean Innovation Lab was founded in 2013 (SIL 1.0) with a competitive Feed the Future grant to develop the foundation for soybean success in Africa. Following a funding renewal that kicked off SIL 2.0 in 2018, SIL turned its focus to scaling technology solutions for widespread release. Since its inception, SIL has entered into partnerships across 46 countries; educated thousands of farmers and breeders; created and commercialized a multi-crop thresher to reduce threshing time by 80%; developed 55 locally adapted soybean seed varieties now under release; and produced low-cost input bundles yielding 260% more than standard practice. 

Recognizing the role of women as smallholder farmers and household decision makers in Africa and worldwide, gender equity and inclusivity are rolled into all of SIL’s development activities. In addition, SIL 3.0 structurally integrates youth capacity building, environmental protection, climate resilience, and ICT connectivity into its technology platforms.

The Soybean Innovation Lab is the only lab to focus on this important high-protein crop.

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Pairwise has built its business around an idea that runs counter to how many companies approach innovation: make transformative technology easier to access.

In this Seed World interview, CEO Tom Adams discusses why broader access to gene editing could speed crop improvement, expand innovation opportunities and help agriculture address emerging challenges. He explains why Pairwise believes no single company can solve all of agriculture's problems alone—and why making advanced breeding technologies available to more organizations could accelerate progress across the industry.

The conversation explores how consumer trust influences technology adoption, why innovations like pitless cherries and seedless blackberries matter beyond convenience, and how future crop improvements could help address labor shortages, automation, harvest efficiency and other production challenges. Adams also shares his perspective on what the industry may be underestimating about the next wave of gene editing innovation.

Watch the full interview to hear why Pairwise believes agriculture is approaching an important inflection point for gene editing, and why the pace of innovation over the next decade could surprise the industry.

Topics Covered:

o Democratizing agricultural innovation

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