The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Soyabean imports hit $200m annually

- Prince Sunduzani Bulawayo Bureau

ZIMBABWE is losing $200 million through soya beans imports every year and depriving the country of the muchneeded foreign currency.

In an interview on Tuesday, Deputy Minister of Agricultur­e, Mechanisat­ion and Irrigation Developmen­t (Cropping) Davis Marapira said Government will give 10kg of soyabean seed to each farmer under the Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme so that the country does not lose money on imports.

He said Government wants to stop importing soyabeans, hence the support for farmers.

“We no longer want to import soyabeans. We want to produce and export soyabeans and generate our own foreign currency,” said Deputy Minister Marapira.

“We are losing over $200 million per year on soyabeans alone, as we import over $200 million worth of soyabeans, which is very bad.”

He said the money which is going towards soyabean imports could be used to buy agricultur­e machinery that can help improve the performanc­e of the agricultur­al sector.

“If the $200 million is used to buy tractors and inputs, which will be given to our farmers that will help our agricultur­al turnover and probably grow our economy by an extra 10 percent,” he said.

The importatio­n of the raw material increases production costs for cooking oil and other basic consumer goods. In August, Oil Expressers’ Associatio­n of Zimbabwe (OEAZ) president Mr Busisa Moyo said there was need to boost soyabeans production to reduce production costs.

Zimbabwean farmers produce an average of 30 000 tonnes of soyabeans per year, against demand of about 300 000 tonnes. Some local cooking oil producers have started contractin­g local growers to increase soyabeans production to reduce reliance on imports.

 ??  ?? Deputy Minister Marapira
Deputy Minister Marapira

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