Membership: Join the Sector’s Unified Voice
The Potato Council of Tanzania is a member-led organisation. Every farmer cooperative, seed multiplier, processor, agro-input supplier, financial institution, research body, and development partner that belongs to the Council adds weight to the sector’s collective voice — and gains access to a platform built specifically to make their work easier, more visible, and more profitable.
This page explains who can join, why it matters, and how to apply.
Why Membership Matters
The PCT is the only formally registered industry body for Tanzania’s potato sector. Membership puts you inside the room where:
- The National Round Potato Development Strategy is being shaped.
- Tanzania’s regional positions at the Jumuiya Potato Platform are formulated.
- Standards for seed certification, grading, and packaging are negotiated.
- Market intelligence is produced and shared.
- Strategic partnerships with development partners and donors are brokered.
- Investor introductions to processing, cold-chain, and seed system opportunities take place.
Outside the room, you read about decisions. Inside the room, you make them.
Who Can Join
The PCT welcomes membership applications from across the value chain. Eligibility is open to:
Farmer Cooperatives, Associations & Producer Organisations
Registered groups such as Isowelo AMCOS and Lusitu Agribusiness Group form the foundation of our membership. Cooperatives aggregate production, negotiate collectively, access financial services, and serve as conduits for peer-to-peer extension.
Commercial Seed Multipliers & Breeders
Companies producing certified seed for the Tanzanian market — including Tanzanice, Mtanga Foods, and international partners such as HZPC (Netherlands) — are core members. Their participation aligns variety development, seed availability, and farmer demand.
Agro-Input Suppliers
Major fertiliser, crop-protection, and equipment companies — Yara, Syngenta, and the network of regional and local agro-dealers — bring technical knowledge and distribution networks that make scaling improved practices possible.
Processors, Exporters & Traders
Manufacturers of crisps, frozen fries, starch, and flour, plus exporters serving the Kenyan, Comoros, Zanzibar, and emerging Zambian markets.
Financial Institutions
Banks (NMB Bank), development finance institutions (Tanzania Agricultural Development Bank — TADB), microfinance providers, and SACCOs offering value-chain finance products.
Research Institutions & Universities
TARI, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Uyole Agricultural Centre, and other academic and research bodies generating knowledge for the sector.
Government Regulatory & Extension Agencies
TOSCI, TPHPA, the Ministry of Agriculture, and local government extension services maintain working memberships to ensure policy coherence.
Development Partners & NGOs
Organisations supporting smallholder transformation, climate adaptation, and food systems development.
The Stakeholder Ecosystem
The PCT’s strength is the integrated nature of its membership. Below is a snapshot of the value chain represented in the Council:
LABORATORY → BREEDING → SEED MULTIPLICATION → INPUT SUPPLY
↓
FARMER COOPERATIVES (smallholders + commercial)
↓
AGGREGATION → GRADING → COLD STORAGE
↓
PROCESSING (crisps, fries, starch, flour) → DOMESTIC RETAIL
↓ ↓
EXPORT (Kenya, Comoros, Zanzibar, Zambia) URBAN VENDORS (Chipsi Mayai)
↓
CONSUMER
Every link in this chain has a seat at the Council’s table.
Member Benefits
PCT members access an integrated package of benefits:
1. Policy Advocacy Platform
Direct input into national strategy development, regulatory reform processes, and ministerial consultations. Your voice in the room when decisions affecting the sector are made.
2. Market Intelligence
Regular updates on production data, price trends, export movements, demand forecasts, and competitor activity — distributed to members ahead of public release.
3. Networking & Matchmaking
B2B introductions, field days, annual conferences, and stakeholder forums that put members in front of buyers, financiers, processors, and partners.
4. Technical Support
Access to GAP training, agronomic advice, business development services, and the PCT’s expanding library of practical resources.
5. Certification & Quality Assurance Guidance
Direct support on seed certification, grading standards, traceability systems, and the technical requirements of premium and export markets.
6. Brand & Visibility
Featured profiles in PCT communications, eligibility for the Council’s annual sector awards, and use of the PCT membership mark on member communications.
7. International Access
Participation in EAC and continental potato platforms, including delegations to the World Potato Congress and other international forums.
How to Apply
The Council’s membership application process is designed to be straightforward.
Step 1 — Initial Inquiry
Contact the Secretariat with a brief description of your organisation: who you are, where you operate, and what role you play in the value chain.
📧 info@potatocouncil.or.tz (or use the Contact page →)
Step 2 — Application Form
The Secretariat will share the full membership application form, which captures organisational details, contact persons, areas of operation, and your stated interests in PCT activities.
Step 3 — Review
Applications undergo a straightforward review by the Secretariat to ensure alignment with the Council’s mission and values. The review typically takes 2–4 weeks.
Step 4 — Onboarding
Approved members receive a welcome pack, are added to the member directory, and are introduced to the relevant working groups and committees aligned with their interests.
Membership Categories & Fees
Membership categories and fee structures are calibrated to ensure the Council remains accessible to smallholder cooperatives while reflecting the institutional capacity of larger members.
[Detailed fee schedule to be published once finalised by the Council’s Board.]
For now, prospective members are encouraged to contact the Secretariat directly for category-specific information.
Member Code of Conduct
All PCT members commit to:
- Ethical practice across the value chain.
- Transparent dealings with farmers, suppliers, and customers.
- Adherence to standards set by the Council and relevant regulators.
- Active participation in Council activities and stakeholder dialogues.
- Contribution to the sector’s collective progress — not just individual benefit.
A Final Note
The Tanzanian potato sector has moved further in the past five years than it did in the previous fifty. The next decade — and the World Potato Congress arriving an hour from our northern border in Naivasha, Kenya in October 2026 — will determine whether that momentum becomes durable transformation or a missed opportunity.
The Potato Council exists to make sure it is the former.
We need every actor in the value chain to be at the table.