To advance professional development opportunities in food and agriculture venture capital, the Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research (FFAR) is providing funds to support the Kirchner Impact Foundation’s program for Historically Black Colleges and University (HBCU) students. The Rockefeller Foundation has also recently committed to supporting the Kirchner Impact Foundation.
Only a very small percentage of investment professionals in venture capital are people of color. The Kirchner Food Fellowship is launching its inaugural cohort for HBCU students to support the development of future agricultural financiers and build diversity and inclusion in the industry.
While the amount of impact investment capital is increasing rapidly, uniform access to that capital is not. For that to improve, new, low-cost, high-efficiency investment models are needed to push money and business resources out to entrepreneurial teams in remote regions and underserved communities. Assembling, training and empowering diverse investment teams for this purpose is the core mission of the Kirchner Food Fellowship. The program trains university students each year to evaluate investment opportunities and gives them discretion over investment decisions for companies solving critical food and agriculture challenges.
Candidates for this cohort must be graduate or undergraduate students attending an HBCU, self-motivated, intellectually curious and passionate about the power of impact-oriented, for-profit businesses to address global food security challenges. The program is accepting applications until May 15. Application information is available on the Kirchner Food Fellowship website.
FFAR has supported the Kirchner Food Fellowship program since 2018. To date, program alumni represent over 40 institutions, nine countries and gender parity. To highlight outcomes of this workforce development program, alumni have gone on to start their own businesses and to work as investors or in adjacent industries.