The HAPPY Progamme

Harnessing Agriculture Productivity and Prosperity for Youth

Overview

Transforming Youth Agriculture

The HAPPY Project aims to create sustainable employment opportunities for Ghanaian youth by transforming agriculture into a commercially viable and attractive sector. The programme focuses on equipping young people with technical, entrepreneurial, and agribusiness skills, while facilitating access to land, finance, and markets.

Through the development of economic enclaves and structured in-grower/out-grower models, the project enhances productivity, promotes value chain integration, and supports inclusive agricultural growth. The goal is to improve incomes, livelihoods, and resilience among youth, engaged in the programme.

The goal is to improve incomes, livelihoods, and resilience among youth engaged in the programme.

Programme Goal

Empowering Youth through Agricultural Productivity and Sustainable Prosperity. The goal is to sustainably enhance the incomes, livelihoods, and resilience of youth engaged in the programme.

Project Locations

Where We Operate

Kasunya (Greater Accra Region)

Torgorme, Ho & Aveyime (Volta Region)
 
Mion, Yendi & Gushiegu (Northern Region)
 
Walewale (North East Region)
 
Kasena Nankana East & West, Pusiga & Bulisa North (Upper East Region)
Kasunya

Kasunya - Main Project Site

Greater Accra Region

Impact Data

Key Implementation Figures

5882 Youth

Beneficiaries (direct and indirect) engaged to date.

1207 Youth

Farmers trained and deployed (in-growers)

Six Anchor Farmers

Engaged across multiple 

25,876.27 (MT)

Production Figures

6081.6 hectares

Land Cultivation

How It Works

Working Capital & Revolving Fund

The HAPPY Project provides working capital support and input (seeds, fertiliser, crop protection) and mechanization services to farmers through a self-sustaining revolving fund model.

1

Input Support

Youth Farmers receive seeds, fertiliser, and agricultural inputs to start cultivation.

2

Harvest & Repay

After harvest, youth farmers repay the cost of inputs from their proceeds.

3

Keep Profits

All profits remain with the youth farmers, building their financial independence.

Repaid funds are recycled to support the existing cohort of youth farmers

New funding is made available yearly to support new cohort

Initiatives

Key Programmes

DiWAOW (Diversity in Women in Agriculture Initiative)

Twelve (12) women were equipped with skills in tractor operation and agricultural mechanization. This has resulted in five securing permanent employment and seven currently serving on internship.

Learners Demonstrating Tractor driving skills
Trade millers training

Trade Millers Training

Eighty (80) young women and men were successfully trained to build their skills in rice drying and storage. The goal was to empower them to turn rice drying and storage into profitable and sustainable businesses right in their own communities.

YESSPRO (Youth Entrepreneurship in Seed Systems Production)

YESSPRO successfully trained 25 youth, equipping them with practical skills and entrepreneurial knowledge in certified seed production. The programme empowers participants to build sustainable businesses while strengthening reliable seed supply within their communities.