TERMS OF REFERENCE
Baseline Study of the “Enhancing Food and nutrition security in the Southern Province of Rwanda.” Project
(2024-2026) Funded by the European Development Fund April 2024
1. Introduction
The Terms of Reference provides details on the Baseline study to be conducted for the “Enhancing Food and nutrition security in the Southern Province of Rwanda” project and outlines the tasks and deliverables that the successful consultant(s) will undertake.
2. Background
Tearfund is a Christian international aid and development agency working globally to end poverty and injustice, and to restore dignity and hope in the world’s poorest communities. Tearfund operates in more than fifty countries around the world, working with a network of local partners, churches and communities, speaking out on behalf of poor people, campaigning for justice and raising the profile of key poverty issues, as well as building the resilience and capacity of local communities to develop and respond to disasters.
Tearfund in Rwanda, in partnership with Association Mwana Ukundwa (AMU) have successfully secured funding from the European Development Fund, to implement a 3-year (2024 -2026) project “Enhancing Food and nutrition security in the Southern Province of Rwanda”. The project aims to promote food nutrition security and food systems resilience in the Gisagara and Nyaruguru districts, and increase the adoption of sustainable food production practices for smallholder farmers .
The project targets to improve productivity, income and dietary intake among 10,000 smallholder farmers across the targeted areas.
Project Situation analysis
More than 70 percent of the nation’s population is employed in some form of agriculture. Boosting food production in Rwanda, alongside strong local demand for high value crops, highlights the potential that improved food production and marketability can have on the nation’s economy. The Government of Rwanda (GoR) is keen on increasing food production as demonstrated in the Plan for the Transformation of Agriculture (PSTA4). However, a recent survey by Tearfund (October 2022) shows that there remains some significant gaps due to a large informal sector characterised by limited technical capacity of farmers, limited access to farm inputs, high post-production losses, lack of access to appropriate post-harvest handling infrastructures, poor access to markets and non-compliance to quality and food safety standards. Towards developing this proposed action, Tearfund and its co-applicant Association Mwana Ukundwa (AMU), carried out a comprehensive survey on SHGs to identify the risks and opportunities in the sector. The findings validated the challenges in the agriculture sector especially among smallholder farmers; access to finance, poor financial literacy, limited plots of land, and lack of collateral have remained obstacles limiting the abilities of the target communities to boost their food production. Food insecurity, due to climate change, poor agricultural productivity, environmentally harmful farming practices like slash and burn, and poor access to markets affect food production. Also, income for smallholder food producers, food security and food systems resilience options are limited for the poorest of the poor districts that this project is targeting. The Southern Province, where Tearfund is focusing on, has the second highest food insecurity prevalence which stood 22.2 Percent and particularly at 28.4 percent and 28.9 percent for Gisagara and Nyargururu respectively according to the last Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Assessment (CFSVA, 2021).
Project Overview & Target Groups
Tearfund Rwanda in partnership with Association Mwana Ukundwa (AMU) are implementing KUNGAHARA: Enhancing Food and nutrition security in the Southern Province of Rwanda, running between 1st January 2024 and 31th December 2026, funded by the European Union.
Project Objectives
Overall Objective: To promote food and nutrition security and food systems resilience in Gisagara and Nyaruguru districts.
Specific Objective:
Crosscutting Specific objective:To Strengthen Youth, people with disabilities and women's organisation and leadership in food security and food systems resilience in Gisagara, and Nyaruguru districts of Rwanda by December 2026.
To address the various barriers to food availability and nutrition, the project will implement locally-led and owned change at every level of the food system, including production, aggregation, processing, distribution, and consumption, through three outcomes:
Project result framework
Results chain |
Indicators |
Impact To promote food and nutrition security and food systems resilience in Gisagara and Nyaruguru districts. |
Prevalence of moderate or severe food insecurity, disaggregated by sex and district (SDG 2.1.2). |
Prevalence of stunting (height for age <-2 standard deviation from the median of the World Health Organization (WHO) Child Growth Standards) among children under 5 years of age, disaggregated by sex and district (GERF 1.25/ SDG 2.2.1). |
|
Outcome 1: Increased adoption of sustainable food production practices for smallholder farmers Gisagara and Nyaruguru districts. |
OC.1.1 Number of smallholder farmers adopting improved post-harvest management practices, value addition processes and technologies, disaggregated by sex and district. OC.1.2 Areas of agricultural and pastoral ecosystems where sustainable management practices have been |
introduced with EU support (ha) (disaggregated by district) (GERF 2.2). OC.1.3 Average yield per hectare, disaggregated by type of crop and district. |
|
Outcome 2: Improved productivity and incomes for smallholder farmers including women-led and men-led SHGs (Self-Help Groups) and cooperatives. |
OC. 2.1 Average household's annual income from agricultural products sales, disaggregated by sex: headed by men/women and district. OC.2.2 Number of farmers in agri-business, disaggregated by sex and district OC. 2.3 Yearly volume of agricultural production (metric tons), disaggregated by crop and district |
Outcome 3: Improved dietary intake among small-holder farmers |
OC 3.1. Proportion of families reporting they have consumed meals from at least 4 recommended food groups in the last 7 days, disaggregated by sex: male/female headed household and district. OC 3.2 Proportion of families saying they have at least 3 meals a day (disaggregated by sex: male/female headed household and district. |
Output 1.1: Increased capacities of small holders on GAP (good agricultural practices) and sustainable agricultural management practices. |
OP 1.1.1. Number of smallholders reached with EU supported interventions aimed to increase their sustainable production, access to markets and/or security of land, disaggregated by sex and district (GERF 2.1). OP 1.1.2. Number of members of SHGs (Self-help groups) with access to agri-inputs with the support of the EU, disaggregated by sex and district. |
Output 1.2: Strengthened capacity of the smallholder farmers on post-harvest management practices, value addition and post-harvesting technologies. |
OP 1.2.1. Number of smallholder farmers trained by the EU supported intervention with increased knowledge and skills on improved post-harvest handling practices, processes and/or technologies, disaggregated by sex and district. OP 1.2.2. Number of Self-Help Groups (SHGs) with access to post-harvest handling facilities and equipment with the support of the EU, disaggregated per value chain and district. |
Output 2.1: Increased availability of financial means and services for businesses (including women and/or youth led entities) active in innovative and sustainable agriculture. |
OP2.1.1 Number of beneficiaries with access to financial services with EU support: (b) people, disaggregated by sex and district) (GERF 2.17). OP 2.1.2 Number of bankable business plans developed by supported SHG members and submitted to Financial Service Providers with the support of the EU. OP 2.1.3 Number of SHGs linked with agri- financing services providers, disaggregated by district. |
Output 2.2: Strengthened capacity of smallholder farmers from SHGs and cooperatives on business activities, enterprise development and investment skills. |
OP 2.2.1 Number of community volunteers trained by EU funded intervention with increased knowledge and/or skills on entrepreneurship skills, disaggregated by sex and district. OP 2.2.2 Number SHG members trained by EU supported intervention with increased knowledge and/or skills on entrepreneurship skills, disaggregated by sex and district. OP2.2.3 Number of smallholder farmers groups trained by EU supported intervention with increased knowledge and skills on agri-business market linkages, disaggregated by sex: headed by men/women and district |
Output 3.1: Increased knowledge of smallholder farmers on nutrition-sensitive agriculture practices. |
OP 3.1.1 Number of SHGs trained by EU supported intervention with increased knowledge and/or skills on Kitchen Garden establishment, disaggregated by sex, disaggregated by district. OP 3.1.2 Number of community volunteers trained by EU supported intervention with increased knowledge and/or skills on nutrition-sensitive agriculture and nutrition practices, disaggregated by sex and district. |
3. Objectives of the baseline study
The Overall Objective is to provide a situation analysis at the start of the project activities, confirm indicators and targets, and establish baseline values for all performance indicators. The baseline study will lay the foundation for regular monitoring to measure progress against the output, outcome and impact indicators and provide a basis for mid-term and end line evaluation of the project. . This will enable the project team to assess implementation progress and achievements, identity gaps and areas of improvements as well as document lessons learnt and best practices. The baseline will comprise a gender-specific knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) survey on nutrition at the home level in the project's target area
Taking all of this into account, Tearfund is looking to recruit a consultant/firm who will be responsible for the design of the baseline assessment framework, lead and coordinate data collection including report writing.
Specific objectives of the study
During the baseline study the focus will be:
4. Scope of the study
The baseline study will be conducted in 2 Districts of the Southern province of Rwanda where the EU Kungahara project will be implemented which are Gisagara and Nyaruguru to improve food systems for smallholder farmers in a sustainable manner. The project targets women and youth-led farmer groups by providing them with the skills and resources they need to increase production and sell their crops more easily. This will result in more nutritious food availability for people to eat.
To collect the baseline benchmark it will be necessary to collect information from a variety of people, including those who will benefit from the project, volunteers, traders, and others involved in the food crop value chain.
The project’s target groups include:
The study will focus on the Seven selected value chains: Gisagara district ( Maize, Banana, Avocado,
Onions, Cassava and Beans) and Nyaruguru district ( Irish potatoes, Maize, Onions and Beans)
5. Approach and Methodology
The Baseline study will adopt a consultative and participatory approach, using both quantitative and qualitative methods of enquiry to facilitate data collection, analysis and triangulation of data. The baseline will focus on gathering data against the results framework indicators, and the sampling for primary data collection should be statistically representative of the target population. The methodology will include but not be limited to secondary data review and primary data collection, participatory methods such as household/farmer survey, focus group discussions, key informant interviews with core stakeholders and observation during field visits. The study should apply a research methodology that is gender and youth sensitive and use data tools that enhance the reliability of data collected.
The following procedural steps will be followed to conduct the study;
6. Assignment timeline
The baseline study will be conducted over the period of 60 working days between May and July 2024. The detailed calendar for the assignment will be agreed upon with the consultant(s).
The consultants undertaking the baseline study are responsible for safeguarding and ensuring ethics at all stages of the study (preparation and design, data collection, data analysis, reporting and dissemination). This will include, ensuring informed consent, protecting privacy, confidentiality and anonymity of participants, ensuring cultural sensitivity, respecting the autonomy of participants and ensuring fair recruitment of participants (including women and other vulnerable groups). Tearfund’s Safeguarding and Anti- Fraud policies will be annexed to the consultancy contacts.
Consultants are responsible for managing any potential ethical risks and issues and must put in place, in consultation with the Tearfund EU Kungahara Project Manager, processes and systems to identify, report and resolve any ethical issues that might arise during the implementation of the study. Ethical approvals and reviews by relevant national and institutional review boards must be sought where required.
The consultant(s) are required to set out their approach to ensuring complete compliance with international good practice with regards to research ethics and protocols. The consultant must show how they will comply with the Rwanda data privacy and protection law.
8. Governance and Accountability
8.1. Responsibility of the consultant/firm
The consultant(s) will have the following responsibilities;
8.2. Responsibility of Tearfund
Tearfund will have the following responsibilities to facilitate the consultant(s) to execute the assignment in the agreed timelines and quality;
9. Deliverables
The consultant (s) is expected to provide the following:
10. Qualification and required experience for the assignment
The assignment team should comprise of a team leader and team members with the following key qualification and experience;
11. Applications process
ITEM |
ITEM DESCRIPTION |
UNIT PRICE |
NO. OF UNIT |
TOTAL |
10. Application deadline
Applications should be submitted by 17:00 CAT on 4th May 2024 to Tearfund Rwanda through the following email erica.muco@tearfund.org with a copy to john.bucyana@tearfund.org, with mention of “Consultancy to conduct a baseline evaluation for Kungahara project” in the subject line.
Applications will be assessed based on the technical quality (70%) and the proposed budget / value for money (30%). For technical quality, the following will be considered: Experience and qualifications of bidder/team; strength of proposed methodology; work plan and schedule of activities.
Tearfund reserves the right to negotiate the timeline and budget with the bidder before offering a contract.
Note: Late and incomplete applications will not be considered.
Kigali, April 18th, 2024.
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