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PepsiCo, Absa back Khula in new funding round

PepsiCo’s South African development fund and Absa are backing a mobile marketplace for farmers that allows them to sell their products as well as source logistics, technical expertise and financing.

TechCentral via Bloomberg

Khula’s app has 20 000 users, ranging from emerging to commercial farmers, and is targeting R200-million in funding by mid-year, co-founder and CEO Karidas Tshintsholo said in an interview. It has raised R126-million to date in a funding round led by E Squared Investments, he said.

Pepsico — whose Kgodiso Development Fund has backed Khula — is the biggest buyer on a closed trading platform that allows pre-approved farmers to sell to buyers from supermarkets and others, said Tshintsholo.

In an effort to redress inequities stemming from apartheid, government requires multinational companies operating in South Africa to set up local funds to support local initiatives in lieu of selling shares to black South Africans in so-called equity-equivalence programmes.

All of the company’s shareholders from previous seed-funding rounds — including South African specialty-chemicals company AECI and Khula’s founders — participated in its series-A programme, and it will seek strategic investors to close the round, he said.

“As part of the series-A funding, we will scale the South African operations and look to set up pilots in East Africa, and potentially Latin America,” said Tshintsholo, without giving details on the company’s current size. Its valuation has increased 10 times since its seed-funding round in 2023, he said.

Tech needed

Africa is home to the world’s fastest-growing population and has about 60% of its people working in agriculture. The continent also has about three-fifths of Earth’s uncultivated arable land, yet it still imports much of its food, according to the African Development Bank.

To change this, Africa needs investors and technology firms to assist with expertise and bridging the gap left by an absence of infrastructure in many parts of the continent. The AfDB estimates that the current financing shortfall in Africa’s agriculture industry is as much as US$65-billion/year.

The firm has incorporated artificial intelligence into its software models to help food growers identify crop diseases, among other functionality, he said.

“A farmer can also do things like take a picture of a rotten tomato and the app will provide details on whats wrong with it through the models that we have trained,” said Tshintsholo.

Khula is also experimenting with ways to provide funding to farmers, he said.  — Loni Prinsloo and Rivaldo Jantjies, (c) 2025 Bloomberg LP

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