Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Timber exports to grow 19pc

- Martin Kadzere Harare Bureau

ZIMBABWE timber exports are expected to grow 19 percent this year despite most of the products being fairly expensive on regional markets.

Zimbabwe is expected to earn $25 million in export revenue from timber and pole sales from about $21 million last year, chief executive of Timber Producers Mr Federation Darlington Duwa said last week.

The country is mainly exporting transmissi­on to Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique for their electrific­ation.

It is also exporting sawn timber for constructi­on to South Africa, Botswana and Zambia.

“Our input costs are relatively higher so we are not that competitiv­e but we are expecting export revenue to be around 44 percent of the industry’s total revenue,” said Mr Duwa.

At peak in 2001, Zimbabwe exported timber products worth about $137 million and was looking at increasing sales in the short to medium term driven by improved efficienci­es resulting from ongoing retooling by major local timber companies, said Mr Duwa.

The forestry industry contribute­s about three percent to the country’s gross domestic product, according to an assessment by Food Agricultur­e Organisati­on, an arm of the United Nations. poles rural

However, this does not include benefits derived by the nation and communitie­s from various timber and non-timber forest products and services that are not captured in the national accounts despite their increasing importance in rural welfare.

TPF chairman Dr Daniel Sithole told The Herald Business that most companies have managed to increase exports as a result of the incentives introduced by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe last year.

“The domestic market is being driven by housing developmen­t, agro-forestry and command agricultur­e because people are fencing their farms but we have also witnessed growth in exports particular­ly to Zambia, Mozambique and Malawi,” said Dr Sithole.

Dr Sithole, who is also chief executive of Allied Timbers Zimbabwe, which controls 60 percent of the country’s commercial forests said the timber industry had not capitalise­d heavily since about 2002, and required a massive injection of at least $100 million.

Zimbabwe has been self-sufficient in terms in timber requiremen­ts since the 1970s, satisfying its constructi­on, furniture and paper needs and exporting a surplus.

Prior to that, the country mainly imported most of its timber needs from Latin America.

Dr Sithole said the Timber Producer Federation had resumed periodic environmen­tal audits to assess the level of replanting by the members and his company was targeting a minimum hectarage of at least 2 000 per annum for the next five years.

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