
Over the past decade, Kosmos Innovation Center (KIC) has emerged as one of Ghana’s most influential platforms for youth entrepreneurship in agriculture. What began as a bold idea—to inspire young people to see agriculture not as a last resort but as a thriving pathway for innovation and enterprise—has grown into a movement that is shaping the future of food systems across the country.
Since its establishment in 2016, KIC has empowered thousands of young Ghanaians with the right skills, tools, and opportunities needed to build successful agribusinesses, creating more than 61,000 direct and indirect jobs, and contributing to sustainable food systems.
Turning Ideas into Agribusiness Ventures
At the heart of KIC’s work is its flagship youth entrepreneurship program, the AgriTech Challenge which equips university or college students and graduates with the entrepreneurial mindset and technical skills needed to develop innovative solutions in agriculture.
Through training, mentorship, market exposure, and business development support, young people transform ideas into viable agribusiness startups, creating employment and addressing real challenges within Ghana’s agricultural value chains.
What sets KIC apart is its practical approach. Participants do not simply learn theory; they conduct market research, develop prototypes, pitch business ideas, and gain direct exposure to industry players. There is tangible evidence of their journey with KIC: joining a KIC program starts with just an idea and progressing to have a real start-upcompany.
“At KIC, we believe that agriculture holds immense potential for innovation, job creation, and economic growth. We empower young people to harness this potential by transforming them into agripreneurs,” said Benjamin Gyan-Kesse, Executive Director for Kosmos Innovation Center. “Over the past decade, we have worked to inspire and equip young people with the entrepreneurial mindset and tools needed to transform agriculture into a modern, dynamic sector.”
Supporting Startups to Scale
Beyond ideation, KIC supports startups to grow and scale through its KIC AgriTech Pro and Incubation Programs. During the AgriTech Pro, young people have access tocatalytic funding also termed as the KIC Traction Fund. This fund allows them to test their Market Viable Product ( MVP) as part of their product development or service model testing.
These initiatives help early-stage agribusinesses refine their business models, strengthen operational capacity, and access markets and investment opportunities. The result is a growing network of youth-led agribusinesses contributing to economic growth and innovation across Ghana’s agricultural sector. Businesses that progress onto the Incubation Program from the AgriTech Challenge Pro, are giving seed funding support to complement the initial Traction Fund. This helps them to prepare to scale up their business, improve their prototype or business model and become investor ready.
Inspiring the Next Generation
KIC’s impact goes beyond universities and colleges. Through initiatives like the KIC School Farm Program, KIC is transforming how young students perceive agriculture.
The program integrates practical farming and entrepreneurship by enabling students to learn valuable agricultural and business skills while cultivating school farms. Todaymore than 81,000 students from close to 700 schools across Ghana are participating, helping nurture the next generation of agricultural innovators.
By introducing agriculture at an early stage, KIC is helping shift the narrative around farming—from subsistence activity to a modern, technology-driven career path.Students also get to appreciate the career opportunities within other sectors.
Strengthening Agri-MSMEs
Through the Business Booster program, KIC has supported 659 Ghanaian owned agri-MSMEs and Farmer Based Organisations through training, coaching and networking support. Businesses have seen significant improvement in their operating businessmodel, governance structures and overall business management processes like bookkeeping and records management.
Empowering Women Agripreneurs
Through the KIC women’s bootcamp, KIC has been committed to providing entrepreneurship training, skills training to more than 21,000 young women, resourcing about 19,000 for alternative livelihood incomes. Women who have been through KIC’s program feel more confident and empowered to take on agriculture and agribusiness than they were prior to the training and capacity building.
Partnerships Driving Impact
KIC’s achievements over the past ten years have been made possible through strong partnerships and collaborations with institutions including Kosmos Energy, the Mastercard Foundation, Cargill, AGRA, UNDP, US development partners, universities, agricultural colleges, and government agencies, among others.
Together, these collaborations have created a powerful ecosystem supporting youth innovation, entrepreneurship, and agricultural transformation.
Policy and Advocacy
Through the Agricultural Innovation for Africa Conference (AIA), KIC focuses on empowering youth- led start-ups and agri-MSMEs in Africa. Through this platform, youth voices are used to help to shape policy around climate smart and resilient agriculture, value addition, and market access.
Looking Ahead: The Next Decade
As KIC marks ten years of impact, the organization is looking toward an even more ambitious future, expanding opportunities for youth, strengthening agribusiness ecosystems, and scaling innovations that can transform agriculture across Africa while creating jobs for young people.
With a growing network of entrepreneurs, partners, and alumni, the next decade promises to deepen the impact of youth-led innovation in agriculture.
For thousands of young people across Ghana, Kosmos Innovation Center has already proven that agriculture is not just about farming, it is about opportunity, innovation, and building a sustainable future.
