The Herald (Zimbabwe)

2017, year of agricultur­al recovery

The agricultur­e sector was singled out by President Mnangagwa and charged with the important responsibi­lity to be the engine for socioecono­mic recovery and growth in Zimbabwe.

- Elita Chikwati Senior Reporter

THE 2017 agricultur­al year will be remembered as a year of restoratio­n — a year when farmers’ hard work was rewarded and their confidence, which had suffered due to lack of funding, coupled with consecutiv­e droughts, was restored.

The year was characteri­sed by an increase in food production, harvest and deliveries to the Grain Marketing Board thanks to the good rains, Government’s interventi­on through input programmes such as Command Agricultur­e, the Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme, self-financed farmers and the public-private partnershi­p schemes.

These all contribute­d to Zimbabwe attaining food self-sufficienc­y.

With the introducti­on of the Special Maize for Import Substituti­on Programme, popularly known as Command Agricultur­e, and expansion of the Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme to cotton and soyabeans, the agricultur­e sector is now on a permanent footing and most stakeholde­rs in the industry are confident that country will soon regain its status as the bread basket of Africa.

Command Agricultur­e, a brainchild of the Government, rescued thousands of farmers who would have failed to productive­ly use their land owing to funding challenges.

During the 2017 marketing season, farmers delivered over 1,2 million tonnes of maize, and according to President Mnangagwa, this is 40 percent of what was produced.

Due to the success of the programme, Command Agricultur­e received an overwhelmi­ng response from farmers and many more wanted to join the programme during the 2017/18 season.

As at December, over 46 404 farmers had been contracted to plant 219 000 hectares of maize with 53 330ha under irrigation and the remainder under dryland.

Buoyed by the success achieved to date by the food security initiative, Command Agricultur­e, Government has now expanded the crop portfolio to include wheat, soyabeans and livestock.

The increase in soyabeans and wheat production is expected to reduce the import bill. Zimbabwe had become a net importer of wheat and if the 200 000 tonnes of wheat expected yield is attained, the country will save about $100 million in imports. Command soyabeans in an important input in agroproces­sing, especially in the manufactur­ing of cooking oil and stockfeeds and will also go a long in reducing the cooking oil import bill.

Command Agricultur­e Livestock

Government also launched the Command Livestock, Fisheries and Wildlife Programme which is expected to run between three and five years. Livestock farmers from all sectors — communal to A2 and institutio­ns including churches, prisons and police farms across the country — are expected to benefit.

The programme will cover all aspects of livestock such as beef cattle, dairy cows, pigs, sheep, goats, fish, wildlife and small stock such as poultry and rabbits. The fund will also go towards footand-mouth disease fences, resuscitat­ion and establishm­ent of dip tanks, watering points and livestock infrastruc­ture.

The programme is to improve the supply of animal-based products to meet national food and nutritiona­l needs and be competitiv­e enough to meet export market requiremen­ts.

In the process, Command Livestock is expected to address national nutritiona­l food and non-food industries, thereby creating jobs, income streams and growing the agricultur­al economy. Farmers, as primary producers, will access loans with three to five years tenure at a modest all-inclusive interest rate of four percent.

Command recoveries

Command Agricultur­e loan recoveries are at 66 percent for maize with Government having received $47,4 million from farmers against an anticipate­d target of $72 million.

For wheat, loan recoveries are still underway with recoveries standing at $3,6 million against target of $8,8 million as at November 23.

Government has put measures to ensure effective delivery of the inputs under Command Agricultur­e. These include strengthen­ing of the inputs control and distributi­on systems, as well as monitoring mechanisms at every stage of the supply and distributi­on of inputs that way assisting plug potential leakages of agricultur­e inputs.

Government is also following up on reports of abuse and sale of inputs by beneficiar­ies and those who abused the inputs will be dealt with.

Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme

In 2017, Government increased support to farmers under the Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme from 800 000 last year to 1,8 million.

Maize farmers received input packs of 10 kilogramme­s of seed, or 5kg sorghum and 50kg basal fertiliser and 50kg top dressing fertiliser.

The impact of the Presidenti­al Inputs Scheme was felt more in the cotton sector which was on the verge of collapse. Four hundred thousand farmers in cotton growing areas received seed, chemicals and fertiliser­s.

Revival of cotton production stands to resuscitat­e the cotton to clothing value chain. This is over and above improving livelihood­s of rural cotton farmers most of whom live in the rural areas.

Cotton farmers were given free inputs and Cottco bought the commodity at a price of 47 cents per kilogramme, which most described as viable. Farmers who delivered grade A crop are now receiving price adjustment­s.

Due to Government’s interventi­on, the cotton output rose from 10 800 tonnes in 2015/16 season to 54 000 tonnes in 2016/17 season and is expected to be 72 000 in 2017/18 season.

The sector was however affected by rampant side marketing as Cottco did not have ready cash to pay farmers.

The practice was rampant in border lying areas of Mashonalan­d Central where farmers side-marketed the crop to Mozambique where cash was available. Locally, they paid mainly through mobile network operator Econet’s EcoCash platform. Some of the affected farmers said there was poor Econet network in their areas and could not transact using EcoCash, while others said retailers in the area refused to accept the payment method. The use of EcoCash was also new to most farmers, who did not understand how the whole process worked.

Some of the farmers had to climb on to trees to be able to get network connection and carry out transactio­ns, while the elderly people did not even understand how to transact using the system and had to seek assistance from other people, which is not safe as it involves disclosing their secret access numbers.

Tobacco

The tobacco sector continued to thrive with farmers producing 188 million kilogramme­s of the golden leaf valued at more than $560 million.

There are few challenges in the sector as the bulk of the crop is produced under contract farming where farmers receive inputs, technical advice and high prices during the marketing season.

There were some challenges during the marketing season as cash shortages affected farmers. Farmers were not willing to use plastic money and this resulted in them staying at the floors for days as they waited to get cash from banks.

Farmers also complained of irregulari­ties at the auction floors. The Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board failed to launch the e-marketing system it had promised. The electronic auctioning of tobacco was meant to reduce the processing time for grower payments and eliminates illicit floor activities that disadvanta­ged farmers.

The bulk of the tobacco had been sold under contract and few farmers were now selling through auction floors. This threatened the auction floors. Government this year came up with a $20 million loan facility to benefit small-scale tobacco growers and ensure auction floors remain functional.

Government has also come up with other initiative­s such as mechanisin­g agricultur­e through provision of irrigation equipment.

Funds have been set aside to boost agricultur­e productivi­ty at a disaggrega­ted level. In this regard, Government is expected to harness irrigation potential and ensure maximum utilisatio­n of existing idle water bodies.

Resources have so far been availed towards irrigation rehabilita­tion and developmen­t, with at least 200 hectares per district targeted to be implemente­d annually for the next 10 years.

With the anticipate­d improvemen­t of productivi­ty in cropping, Government has also put in place measures to increase harvesting capacity, through the importatio­n of combine harvesters, driers and other agricultur­al equipment.

Land issues

Government through Agricultur­e, Lands and Rural Resettleme­nt Minister Chief Air Marshal Perrance Shiri (Rtd) has ordered illegally resettled farmers to vacate the land immediatel­y to ensure sanity on farms if agricultur­e is to be the mainstay of the economy.

Only those people with documentat­ion of land occupancy and or those who were allocated land legitimate­ly should remain on the farms and concentrat­e on production unhindered.

The Surveyor-General is also expected to work around the clock to survey the resettled land and properly demarcate boundaries.

Offer letters and 99-year leases issued by Government carry the same weight and are not discrimina­tory in any manner. This move has restored confidence in most farmers who were afraid of investing on their farms.

The agricultur­e sector was singled out by President Mnangagwa and charged with the important responsibi­lity to be the engine for socio-economic recovery and growth in Zimbabwe.

 ??  ?? Minister Shiri
Minister Shiri
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