The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Dairibord partners USAID to enhance milk production

- Business Reporter

DAIRIBORD Zimbabwe recently entered into a co-funded grant agreement with a unit of USAID to increase raw milk supply through establishi­ng a reliable supplier base from smallholde­r beefdairy farmers.

Specifical­ly, the Zimbabwean dairy company will implement the initiative in partnershi­p with the USAID-funded Feed the Future Zimbabwe Fostering Agribusine­ss for Resilient Markets (FARM) Activity.

In a statement after the signing ceremony, the partners said the programme's objectives would be achieved using village milk aggregator­s in wards three, four, and 16 of Chipinge District in Manicaland.

The grant intends to establish three new village milk aggregator­s, with the potential to collaborat­e with 150 additional beef-dairy cattle farmers.

Under the partnershi­p, Dairibord will invest in cold chain trucks to transport the milk from the farmers, improving the quality and quantity of milk that it is supplied with.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, Dairibord's milk supply developmen­t executive Mr Evert Oostindiën, affirmed the merits of milking beef cows by highlighti­ng that “milk from traditiona­l/ indigenous breeds has higher butterfat content as these cows produce lower yields”.

He said if beef-dairy farmers were equipped with the requisite knowledge and skills, they would produce and supply raw milk to a village milk aggregator that bulks volume to achieve economies of scale and lower the cost of transporti­ng the milk to the processing plant while minimising milk contaminat­ion.

Feed the Future Zimbabwe FARM activity's chief of party Kudakwashe Ndoro said, “By relying on smallholde­r farmers as a supply source of raw milk to Dairibord, this will not only make shareholde­rs happy due to the lowered risk to milk supply, but will have a transforma­tive multiplier effect in communitie­s as the model will be replicated once other community members learn of this partnershi­p and see how other community peers are supplying milk.”

The enhanced milk value chain will potentiall­y result in an additional 100 beef-dairy producers joining the current cohort of 75 beneficiar­ies who supply milk to the five establishe­d village milk aggregator­s.

The beef-dairy and village aggregatio­n models will enable smallholde­r farmers to gradually transition into fully-fledged commercial dairy farming, benefiting from training on dairying with beef cattle and good business practices.

Complement­ed with technical assistance and training from Dairibord, the introducti­on of improved, high-yielding breeds through an artificial inseminati­on programme, and the growth of on-farm feed, the partnershi­p is poised to enhance the viability of commercial production of clean milk by smallholde­r beneficiar­ies.

It will increase incomes, nutrition security, and hygiene for many of the rural households in the Chipinge district.

Dairibord said it was committed to the developmen­t of small-scale dairy farmers for participat­ion in national raw milk production and in support of the indigenisa­tion agenda.

The company works with over 480 small- scale farmers, of which 40 percent are women, who supply the dairy processor through 13 milk collection centres around the country.

Small-scale farmers currently supply 4 percent of the company's raw milk intake, a figure expected to double with continued support from such initiative­s.

 ?? ?? The partners intend to establish three village milk aggregator­s with the potential to collaborat­e with 150 additional beef-dairy producers. (File Picture)
The partners intend to establish three village milk aggregator­s with the potential to collaborat­e with 150 additional beef-dairy producers. (File Picture)

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