AgriHub calls for faster action to support women entering agriculture

Dominica’s leading agricultural advocacy and development group AgriHub is calling for urgent systemic reforms to boost efficiency and responsiveness in the country’s agricultural sector, after its flagship women-focused SheHarvest initiative uncovered critical delays that threaten to derail women seeking to build careers in commercial farming.

Funded by the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives (CFLI), the SheHarvest Project was designed to remove barriers for women entering the agriculture industry by delivering targeted, practical support: from mechanized land preparation and business development mentorship to training in climate-smart cultivation techniques. At its core, the program aims to support women to move beyond small-scale subsistence farming and build sustainable, commercially oriented agricultural enterprises, according to an official press statement from AgriHub.

While the project drew overwhelming interest from women eager to enter the sector, the rollout process laid bare deep-rooted operational challenges that continue to undermine productivity, strategic planning, and overall progress for farmers across Dominica, AgriHub officials confirmed.

Abigail Shillingford, Executive Director of AgriHub, explained that the SheHarvest implementation experience exposed a clear gap between Dominica’s national ambitions for agricultural growth and the on-the-ground support systems meant to deliver on those goals.

“There is no question that Dominica has bold, clear ambition to grow its agricultural sector,” Shillingford stated. “The critical question we must answer is whether our day-to-day operational systems are keeping pace with that ambition. If we want to draw more women and young people into agriculture as a viable career, the systems that support them have to become far more responsive, practical, and focused on getting things done.”

AgriHub’s project data revealed that land preparation support alone took more than 12 weeks to progress from initial planning to on-the-ground execution. Such extended delays do not just disrupt timing: they directly throw off critical planting schedules, cut potential crop yields, erode farmer confidence, and severely damage participants’ ability to generate consistent income, the organization noted.

Shillingford added that a large share of AgriHub’s work throughout the project was devoted to helping women navigate tangled administrative and operational bottlenecks, just to keep participants engaged and on track.

“As an organization, we have had to consistently coordinate, follow up, and push stalled processes forward just to keep our participants motivated and able to continue their work,” she emphasized. “Without that constant extra intervention, many women would have become discouraged and dropped out before they even planted their first crop.”

Despite the systemic challenges, the CFLI funding allowed the project to mitigate many of the most pressing barriers to production readiness. One key intervention the team rolled out was expanding access to mechanized land preparation via portable tillers, which cut the time women spent preparing plots and dramatically improved cultivation efficiency.

Stephanie Sprott, Counsellor at the High Commission of Canada in Bridgetown, reaffirmed Canada’s commitment to the initiative and praised its work expanding women’s meaningful participation in the regional agricultural sector.

“We are pleased to support AgriHub’s work to help women farmers enter the agricultural system, succeed within it, and sustain their growing enterprises,” Sprott said. “Through the project, participants have gained access to practical tools and equipment, business and financial management training, hands-on skill demonstrations, and stronger connections to key financial and agricultural stakeholders.”

She added: “Canada is proud to stand with regional partners to strengthen food security, build resilience in local food systems, and expand sustainable economic opportunities for farmers across the Caribbean.”

In its press release, AgriHub stressed that building a robust, inclusive agricultural sector requires far more than high-level strategic planning and policy dialogue. The organization argued that equal priority must be given to cutting implementation timelines, improving cross-stakeholder coordination, and upgrading the practical on-the-ground systems that directly shape farmers’ ability to produce harvests and build successful businesses.

The SheHarvest Project is part of AgriHub’s wider organizational strategy to grow women’s participation in Dominica’s agricultural sector through hands-on production support, climate-smart farming training, business planning assistance, and expanded connections to commercial market opportunities.