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The Common Fund for Commodities (CFC) is an autonomous intergovernmental financial institution established within the United Nations framework. Established in 1989 with its first project approved in 1991, the CFC provides impact finance to small and medium enterprises, cooperatives, and governments in the commodity sector across developing countries.
The organization focuses on creating economic opportunities and unlocking potential in commodity value chains, with particular attention to least developed countries and vulnerable markets. With 101 Member States and 9 Institutional Members, the CFC operates through various mechanisms including direct project financing, technical assistance, and specialized funds like the ACT Fund for climate-resilient agricultural systems.
The CFC invests in commodity sector enterprises to address market volatility, commodity dependence, and development gaps in emerging markets. Their approach emphasizes humanizing value chains through inclusive organic, regenerative, and agroecological systems that build resilience while creating sustainable economic opportunities.
The fund particularly targets SMEs in agricultural commodities, focusing on projects that strengthen global agri-finance and support climate-resilient practices in Sub-Saharan Africa and other developing regions.
UN Framework Institution
Autonomous intergovernmental financial institution with backing from 101 Member States within the UN system.
Commodity Sector Focus
Specialized expertise in agricultural commodities including coffee, cashew, and other value chains across developing markets.
Technical Assistance
Comprehensive support through Technical Assistance Facility for climate-resilient and sustainable agricultural systems.
Global Reach
Active projects spanning Africa, Asia, Latin America with focus on least developed countries and vulnerable markets.
Focus areas
Investment stages
Locations