Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

‘Zimbabwe has shown the way’

- Cletus Mushanawan­i in Tshwane, South Africa

ZIMBABWE showed Southern Africa the way to sustainabl­e developmen­t by spearheadi­ng the Sadc Industrial­isation Strategy and Roadmap, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has said.

President Zuma said it was imperative for the region to value-add products and boost manufactur­ing capacity as espoused by the path-breaking strategy and roadmap. He said this as he took over the Sadc Chairmansh­ip from King Mswati III of Swaziland at the opening of the bloc’s 37th Summit of Heads of State and Government here yesterday.

“In line with the global developmen­t agenda on sustainabl­e developmen­t, Sadc has — under the Chairmansh­ip of Zimbabwe — developed the Regional Industrial­isation Strategy and Roadmap (2015-2063) as an inclusive long-term modernisat­ion and transforma­tion mechanism. The Industrial­isation Strategy and Roadmap sets out three potential growth paths, which are agroproces­sing, mineral beneficiat­ion and manufactur­ing (downstream processing and industry and service sector value chains).”

President Mugabe pushed through the industrial­isation agenda during his tenure as Sadc Chair (August 2014-August 2015) under his broad vision for Africa’s socio-economic transforma­tion. The strategy and roadmap was discussed extensivel­y in August 2014, and then signed at an Extraordin­ary Heads of State and Government Summit in Harare in 2015.

It feeds off Zimbabwe’s own economic blueprint, Zim-Asset, and fits into the African Union’s overarchin­g developmen­t plan, Agenda 2063. President Zuma said, “It is of central importance to Sadc to add value to our resources and to grow our intra-regional trade and our regional brand. Sadc’s goal is to improve and establish manufactur­ing capacity, productivi­ty and competitiv­eness in these sectors. The implementa­tion of these will ensure successful transforma­tion of regional economies from the commodity-dependent growth path to production­induced growth. This will not only raise the living standards of our people, but also facilitate the rapid catch-up of Sadc countries with industrial­ised and developed countries.”

He added that Sadc would promote cross-border projects with potential to strengthen regional value-chains via the Industrial Developmen­t Forum.

“The achievemen­t of this requires a functional regional market which is key to facilitati­ng investment. We will need to ensure that we find an effective way of promoting a rules-based trade environmen­t that promotes certainty and stability. The implementa­tion of commitment­s under the Trade Protocol have to be an integral part of this agenda so as to create an integrated market that is conducive to the developmen­t of regional value-chains.

“. . . As a new initiative, we are proposing the establishm­ent of an Inter-state Natural Gas Committee to share learning for regional gas developmen­t and to prepare for the developmen­t of the wider gas economy. As such, the inclusion and promotion of gas into the regional energy mix will facilitate an increase in universal access to energy, as well as industrial developmen­t in Sadc.”

African Developmen­t Bank president Dr Akinwumi Adesina said African economies had shown resilience, with real growth projected to recover to 3,4 percent this year, from 2,2 percent last year.

“We must address fundamenta­l structural challenges that have continued to hamper growth in Sadc and Africa as a whole. At the top of the list is electricit­y. That is why the African Developmen­t Bank is investing heavily in the power sector. Through our New Deal on Energy for Africa, the bank is investing US$12 billion over the next five years in the energy sector. Investing in the power sector accounts for 35 percent of all the bank’s financing in the Southern African region, with investment­s in major projects such as Medupi Power Project in South Africa, the Kariba Dam Rehabilita­tion Project and Hydro-Power Scheme on the Zambezi, which supplies 34 and 37 percent of the power for Zimbabwe and Zambia, respective­ly.”

Dr Adesina also said, “The developmen­t of the Sadc region will be much faster with greater investment­s in the agricultur­e sector. We strongly support the Sadc Agricultur­al Policy and Investment Plan to transform agricultur­e. Agricultur­e is Africa’s biggest asset and yet it remains largely untapped. The size of the food and agricultur­e market on the continent will rise from the current US$330 billion to US$1 trillion by 2030.”

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