However, past mechanization efforts have often focused narrowly on equipment supply, resulting in low utilization, environmental degradation, and unsustainable investments.
Sustainable Agricultural Mechanization (SAM) offers a holistic approach that aligns mechanization with farming systems, conservation agriculture (CA), climate-smart practices, and inclusive business models. A major constraint to scaling SAM is inadequate human, institutional, policy, and private sector capacity. Addressing these gaps requires a structured and coordinated capacity development approach.
Capacity development in SAM is really about people, systems, and institutions being able to choose, use, manage, and sustain mechanization in a way that boosts productivity without wrecking soils, livelihoods, or the climate. It goes beyond training operators on machines; it’s about strengthening skills, institutions, policies, and markets so that mechanization works for smallholders, SMEs, and national food systems over the long term.