Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Masvingo secures US$10 million FAO grant

- Walter Mswazie in Masvingo

THE Ministry of Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry has secured a US$10 million grant from Food Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) meant for the reclamatio­n of Runde Catchment area, an official has said.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Runde Catchment area land degradatio­n workshop in Masvingo last week, chief environmen­tal officer in the ministry, Mr Joseph Shoko said the money was meant to bring sanity to the environmen­t. He said there was a lot of land degradatio­n due to human activity.

“We have secured funding under the global environmen­tal facility which is administer­ed by FAO to the tune of US$10 million. The grant is meant to help us reclaim Runde Catchment area. We are having this workshop to come up with a working document after which the funder is expected to release the funds. While I cannot tell when the project will start, I assure the nation that by 2030 we would have reclaimed 70 percent of our forestry around Runde Catchment area.”

He said the project will also benefit Bikita and Chivi districts that share the Runde catchment area.

“Our aim is to involve the community in this project and even the recently crafted forestry policy has taken care of that aspect. There is nothing we can do without involvemen­t of the community who coincident­ally, are responsibl­e for the environmen­tal degradatio­n. We have experience­d an increase in population settlement and through their activities have caused untold depletion of the vegetation.”

He said on a yearly basis the catchment area lost at least 10 percent of land cover.

“The catchment area also experience­s 3,7 percent of land degradatio­n in addition to the 10 percent depletion of grazing land per year. So this means in 10 years there won’t be any forestry or pastures to talk about and it is a cause of grave concern,” he said.

Mr Shoko said the ministry in conjunctio­n with other stakeholde­rs was engaging communitie­s, urging them to plant indigenous trees in the catchment area. He said communitie­s should continue to embrace Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS) which have proven effective in reclaiming degraded land.

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