OKO sows US$1.2m seed fund to scale
OKO, an Insurtech start-up that provides inclusive agricultural insurance to secure farmers’ income across Africa, has closed a Seed investment of US$1.2-million. The round was led by Newfund and ResiliAnce, with participation of Mercy Corps Venture, Techstars, ImpactAssets and RaSa.
The start-up, which currently operates in Mali and Uganda, uses satellite data and mobile payments to create automated insurance products for farmers whose fields are affected adversely by weather events - primarily droughts and floods.
With the new funding, OKO aims to strengthen its presence in its two base countries and expand into new markets, beginning with the Ivory Coast.
“Agriculture is by far the largest source of occupation in Africa, with an estimated 33 million farms. And yet, farmers are deprived from basic financial services like insurance and loans,” says Simon Schwall, founder of OKO. “We are using technology to solve this issue and secure the income of those farmers”.
According to information supplied, the company already has approximately 7,000 paying customers in Mali and compensated more than 1,000 farmers last year, who were affected by floods.
OKO’s customers typically grow maize, cotton, sesame or millet. OKO also works with agro-industries to help them with their sustainability goals and secure their relationships with suppliers. Successful pilots were completed with ABInBev and Touton in Uganda.
This convinced Augustin Sayer, partner at Newfund, to support OKO: “We believe recent advancement in IOT and data availability will lead to the rise of parametric insurance in Africa for the benefit of the local populations. Simon and his team have built solid bases in Mali from which OKO can now expand in new countries and offer new insurance products.”
Farmers connect to OKO via a phone (the company adds that no smartphone is required). They can dial a short code to obtain more information and pay through mobile money services. To achieve this level of accessibility, the company partners with mobile operators. “OKO has taken full benefit of the Orange Money platform to provide a service that is both innovative and inclusive” says Aicha Touré, CEO of Orange Money in Mali.
Daniel Block from Mercy Corps Ventures added: "While other micro-insurance for farmers exist, we were impressed by OKO's ability to partner with a pan-African operator like Orange and establish a direct consumer link, which allows for an exciting opportunity to drive deeper user engagement and expand to a suite of insurance products for rural farmers in the future.”
When asked about the next challenges for OKO, Schwall’s answer is clear: “We need to find more partners who can bring our product to farmers, be it NGOs, agro-industrial players, mobile operators or governmental programmes. We proved that our solution is working and answers a strong need. Now we need to scale.”