Submitted
2020 Elevate Prize

ColdHubs – solar powered cold rooms

Team Leader
Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu
About You and Your Work
Your bio:

I am a vegetables farmer, a radio presenter, social entrepreneur, Executive Director of Smallholders Foundation Ltd./Gte. and Founder/CEO of ColdHubs Ltd. I founded Smallholders Foundation, in 2003 at the age of 21 as a rural agricultural development organization that uses radio to inform, educate and improve the livelihood of rural small farmers in Nigeria. My work at the foundation, as a community radio broadcaster on our Smallholder Farmers Rural Radio (FARM 98.0 FM) is to travel to several remote villages to identify challenges and opportunities facing smallholder agriculture. In the course of the work I saw the impact of post harvest losses due to lack of cold storage at key points within the food supply chain. In 2014 we built a solar powered walk in cold room, tested and validated the technology in 11 states of Nigeria. Having achieved success, decided to spin-off the research into a new venture ColdHubs.

Project name:
ColdHubs – solar powered cold rooms
One-line project summary:
100% solar-powered walk-in cold rooms for growers and vendors to store and preserve fresh fruits, vegetables and other perishable food.
Present your project.

We are solving the problem of food spoilage. In developing countries, approximately 50 percent of all horticultural products are lost or wasted before reaching the consumer – intensifying poverty, hunger, and malnutrition. The high rate of post-harvest loss is due to lack of affordable cold storage at key points within the food supply chain. Humidity, ambient temperatures, and poor handling causes fruits and vegetables to spoil.

We are proposing ColdHubs, a 100% solar-powered walk-in cold room installed in farm clusters, horticultural produce aggregation centers and outdoor food markets. The Hubs are used by smallholder farmers, retailers and wholesalers, to store and preserve fresh fruits, vegetables and other perishable foods 24/7, extending their shelf life from 2 days to 21 days.   

ColdHubs elevates humanity by eliminating food spoilage due to lack f cold storage completely, increases income for farmers and vendors and makes safe, nutritious food available for local consumption.

Submit a video.
What specific problem are you solving?

According to the Rockefeller Foundation; Food Waste and Spoilage Initiative 2014, approximately 50 percent of all horticultural products are lost or wasted before reaching the consumer in developing countries – intensifying poverty, hunger, and malnutrition. This affects 470 million smallholder farmers, retailers and food supply chain actors

In Nigeria, food spoilage affects an estimated 93 million smallholder farmers and supply chain actors. Reducing post-harvest loss is critical to improve the livelihoods, nutrition, and resiliency of farmers and communities.

The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) estimates that a 10 percent reduction in global food loss could result in an 11 percent decrease in hunger and a 4 percent decrease in child malnutrition worldwide. In Nigeria, a 35 percent reduction in post-harvest tomato loss alone would create a supply of vitamin A for up 1.1 million children per day. For Nigerian smallholders, this 50 percent loss of fruits and vegetables causes a 25 percent loss of their annual income.

The high rate of postharvest loss is due to a combination of factors, including lack of affordable cold storage at key points within the food supply chain, and lack of knowledge about proper harvesting and postharvest handling.

What is your project?

Our project ColdHubs are 100% solar-powered walk-in cold rooms installed in farm clusters, horticultural produce aggregation centers and outdoor food markets. The Hubs are used by farmers, retailers and wholesalers, to store and preserve fresh fruits, vegetables and other perishable foods 24/7, extending the shelf life from 2 days to 21 days.

Each Hub is made up of:

Cold room: a 10 feet length, 10 feet width and 7 feet height, 120mm insulated cold room panel with floor made of stainless steel.  This contains approximately 3 tons of perishable food arranged in 150 units, 20kg plastic crates, stacked on the floor.

Refrigeration unit: an R290 - propane refrigerant and energy efficient monoblock refrigeration unit for 24/7 refrigeration, using 658w/h.  Temperature is adjustable from -5 to +15° Celsius.

Solar power: provided by rooftop solar panels generating 6kw/h, connected to a set of deep-cycle batteries and inverters. Power generated runs the hub on all weather conditions.

Service: we operate a simple pay-as-you-store model.  Farmers and vendors pay 100 Nigerian Naira, to store one 20 kg crate per day. Hubs are operated by our Hub Operators.

Education: We educate users on best practices for the postharvest handling of fruits and vegetables. 

Who does your project serve, and in what ways is the project impacting their lives?

Our project directly serves, smallholder farmers, retailers and wholesalers of fresh fruits, vegetables and other perishable food. They are mostly women, because women are generally small plot gardeners providing 75% of the labor in production and 100% of the labor in the marketing of fruits, vegetables and other perishable food, with $60 monthly income.

We are currently serving 3,517 users, using our 24 installed cold rooms in sites in Nigeria. 30 more ColdHubs are presently under construction, bringing the projected total number of Hubs, to 54 by the end of 2020.

In 2019, our 24 operational ColdHubs saved 20,400 tons of food from spoilage.

It increased the household income of 3,517 small farmers, retailers and wholesalers by 50%, an additional US$60 to the previous US$60 earned, making their monthly income a total of US$120, simply by eliminating the previous 50% food loss.

Created 48 new jobs for women, by recruiting them to work as Hub Operators and Market Attendants.   

ColdHubs ensured the safety of 20,400 tons of food, eliminating exposure to harsh direct sunlight, chemical, bacterial or parasitic and mycotoxin contamination, making this safe, nutritious food available for local consumption.

24 ColdHubs saved an estimated 462,528 kg of CO2.

Which dimension of The Elevate Prize does your project most closely address?
  • Elevating opportunities for all people, especially those who are traditionally left behind
Explain how your project relates to The Elevate Prize and your selected dimension.

About two-thirds of the developing world’s 3 billion rural people are smallholder farmers. Many are poor and food insecure and with limited access to markets and services. Their choices are constrained, but they produce food for substantial proportion of the world’s population.

The invest meager economic resources to pay for labor, water, seed with the supporting environmental resources- soil, rainfall, sunlight to grow food.

When food is grown and spoils, the resources that went into production are also lost. By addressing food loss through cold storage, ColdHubs enables farmers to earn more without increasing production.

How did you come up with your project?

The idea of ColdHubs came as I was working as an agricultural Community Radio Broadcaster in Nigeria.

I used to run The Smallholders Foundation, a non-profit that uses radio educational programmes to educate, inform and improve the livelihood of farmers in Nigeria.

My work took me to several rural villages and communities across Nigeria because I needed to interview farmers and identify challenges and opportunities in smallholder agriculture. It was during my trips that I discovered massive losses during harvesting, handling processing and distribution at farms, produce aggregation centers and markets due to lack of cold storage. This posing a major concern for the food security, nutrition, and incomes of smallholders in Nigeria, many of whom operate in inefficient food supply chains.

In 2013, I was doing a story on the "Cabbage" in Plateau State, went to Farin Gada Market, and saw lots and lots of Cabbages going to waste. I asked the farmers what can be done to reduce the waste and they said they will need some form of storage inside the market, to store and sell later. It then struck me that all our markets have no storage for fresh fruits and vegetables.

Why are you passionate about your project?

First, I am passionate about our project because it has several benefits. Installing a ColdHubs within a farm cluster, aggregation center or outdoor food market checks off a lot of boxes. It eliminates food spoilage; it makes safe, nutritious food available for public consumption; it increases the income of farmers and vendors; it creates employment opportunities for youth and women and saves the environment due to renewable energy use.

Secondly, I am passionate about our project because I have a personal connection to the working area. I am a Nigerian, working to improve the livelihood of our own people, bringing together my deep local knowledge of the working environment and the rich and excellent western education, I have acquired over time.

Thirdly, I am motivated to pursue this work, because though I miss producing my daily agricultural education radio programs and being at studio listening to radio station callers and answering some callers questions, ColdHubs gives me the unique opportunity to remain engaged with smallholder farmers and food supply chain actors. I still travel regularly to meet the present users of ColdHubs to understand the challenges and opportunities within the post-harvest value chain and work with them to co-create solutions.

Why are you well-positioned to deliver this project?

I grew up from a poor agricultural family. My parents were lowly paid public servants. To supplement their low income, they kept farms, where we cultivated maize, cassava, yam, cocoyam, and potatoes. Then, I never liked working in the farm.

Growing up in Owerri, Imo State we did not have a television at home. My dad had a small battery-operated transistor radio, which served as our window to the world. We listened to BBC, VOA and Radio Nigeria. I was fascinated by radio, I wanted my voice to be heard on radio, I was possessed as a 13-year-old boy to own a radio station someday. In secondary school, I set up the school Press Club and reading local, national and foreign news every morning at school assembly hall. That news I got from listening to my dad's radio.

I wanted to be a journalist but didn't reach the university cutoff mark for the course. I ended up studying History but continued writing for my University Press Club. I cleverly avoided studying any agricultural related courses even after my parents insisted because I felt farmers were poor.

In 2003, at the age of 21, I founded The Smallholders Foundation, and in 2007 I founded the first agricultural community radio station in Nigeria, the Smallholder Farmers Rural Radio (Farm 98.0 FM) which presently informs, educates and improves the livelihood of 250,000 small farmer listeners living in 3 local catchment areas of Imo State, Nigeria.

Provide an example of your ability to overcome adversity.

In September 2013, I set out to build and test a solar powered walk-in cold room. I made a long list and cost of all the parts, but they were too high and unaffordable for me.

I was determined to achieve this goal, so I started off with as much locally available cheaper parts.

Instead of buying expensive 120mm thick insulated cold room panels, I actually used 0.7 sheet metals, padded it with hard foams and covered these foams with well folded plastic tarpaulins - to retain and hold cold temperature.

I reduced the size of cold room prototype from the initial planned 15 feet length and width with 8 feet height; to 4 feet length and width with 7 feet height, to manage scarce materials.

I used a window unit air conditioner as the cooling equipment, instead of buying very expensive monoblock vapor compressor refrigerating unit. I connected the window airconditioner to a CoolBot, a small device which allows a standard window air conditioner to cool a room to 34 F!

I towed this small solar powered walk-in cold room to 11 states of Nigeria demonstrating it at 35 sites and it was well received by farmers and vendors.

Describe a past experience that demonstrates your leadership ability.

In 2003, at the age of 21, I founded The Smallholders Foundation, a social enterprise that promotes sustainable agricultural development and environmental conservation for smallholder farmers, through educational radio programs and field practical demonstrations.

In 2007, with support UNESCO, I founded the first agricultural community radio station in Nigeria, the Smallholder Farmers Rural Radio (Farm 98.0 FM). At this radio station, I design and broadcast 10 hours daily agricultural, environmental management and market information radio programs in the local Igbo Language radio which informs, educates and improves the economic and environmental management capacity of 250,000 smallholder farmer listeners, living in 3 local catchment areas of Imo State, Nigeria.

The educational radio messages enable small farmers acquire modern agricultural and environmental management techniques, receive daily market information, advertise their farm products, and learn critical business skills.

I generate feedback from small farmer, through the clustering and formation of farmers into 195 Smallholder Farmer Listener Clubs established in villages within our broadcast coverage area.

Since 2007 65% of my radio programs listeners have increased their agricultural yield by 50% and their household income by 45%.

How long have you been working on your project?
8 years
Where are you headquartered?
Owerri, Imo, Nigeria
What type of organization is your project?
  • Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
More About Your Work
Your Business Model & Funding
The Prize
Solution Team:
Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu
Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu
CEO