Solomon Islands Calls for Long-Term Development Finance and Water Security at IFAD Governing Council

By: James Galvez - Managing Editor February 16, 2026

Franklyn Derek Wasi delvering the country's intervention at the Forty-Ninth Session of the Governing Council of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)

The Minister for Agriculture and Livestock Development, Franklyn Derek Wasi, delivered statements on behalf of the Solomon Islands Government at the Forty-Ninth Session of the Governing Council of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). He participated in two high-level Leaders’ Dialogues focusing on financing rural development and investing in water security.

At the session titled “New Frontiers for International Financial Institutions – Financing Rural Development at the First Mile,” Minister Wasi emphasised that in the Solomon Islands, rural development begins at the first mile, where farmers are most remote, markets are fragmented, and risks are highest.

“For us, financing rural development means financing systems, not just projects. Smallholders do not fail because they lack effort—they fail when finance, extension, infrastructure, and markets do not move together,” he said.

The Minister urged international financial institutions (IFIs) to prioritise blended finance, de-risk early-stage investments, and support long-term institutional partnerships. Highlighting the Government’s collaboration with IFAD through the AIM-N project, he noted ongoing investments in strengthening farmer organisations, nutrition-sensitive value chains, and provincial delivery systems to ensure women, youth, and remote communities actively participate as economic actors.

“IFIs have a critical role in reshaping this space by blending public finance with private capital, de-risking early-stage investments, and backing institutions that stay the course beyond pilot phases,” he added.

In the second dialogue, “From Farm to Market – Investing in Water Security,” Minister Wasi stressed that water security is a matter of survival for Small Island Developing States.

“Our farmers face erratic rainfall, saline intrusion, and climate shocks. Without reliable water, productivity declines, nutrition suffers, and market participation becomes impossible,” he said.

He reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to integrating climate-resilient water harvesting, irrigation, watershed protection, and post-harvest systems into broader agricultural and market strategies. Through IFAD-supported initiatives, the Solomon Islands is aligning water management with food security, ecosystem resilience, and rural livelihoods.

Minister Wasi called on development partners to scale investments that combine infrastructure with governance, community ownership, and climate adaptation, noting that sustainable transformation at the first mile depends on patient capital, strong local institutions, and enduring partnerships.


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