The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zhovhe-Beitbridge canal to include citrus farming

- Thupeyo Muleya

THE scope of works for the developmen­t of a 63km canal between Zhovhe Dam and Beitbridge town have been reconfigur­ed to incorporat­e community piped water projects, citrus irrigation and fisheries.

Speaking during a recent visit to Zhovhe Dam, Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t Minister Dr Anxious Masuka said the implementa­tion of the Zhovhe project was long overdue.

The Government was finalising preliminar­y works to speed up the full implementa­tion of the US$35 million Zhovhe project that is set to turn Beitbridge into a greenbelt.

Under this interventi­on, the Zhovhe project will be expanded to include citrus farming and fisheries.

Constructe­d in 1995, Zhovhe Dam is one of the 10 biggest water bodies in the country with a holding capacity of 133 million cubic metres.

The irrigation and water canal project was mooted in 1998, but nothing much was done on the ground until the Government under the Second Republic, secured a US$20 million loan from Kuwait and contribute­d US$15 million from the Treasury to the project.

Among other things, the Zhovhe project will irrigate 2 500-hectares.

On its course to Beitbridge, the water canal will supply commercial and smallholde­r farmers in Wards 14 and 6 with irrigation water.

“Here at Zhovhe Dam, the Kuwaiti-funded project was very narrow considerin­g that it was just looking at commercial irrigation. Now, we have expanded its scope to include fisheries, be it commercial and community fisheries, the V30 accelerato­r model where we are going to do 200 hectares as we convey the water to Beitbridge,” said Dr Masuka.

He said the Government was also going to create facilities for clean drinking water for communitie­s, schools and rural service centres located along the canal.

“So, this is our plan to bring Zhovhe Dam water into production and productivi­ty that benefits the local population,” said Dr Masuka.

He said Government is also working on a plan to export 15 million cubic metres of raw water to South Africa annually.

Dr Masuka said the transfer agreement between Zimbabwe and South Africa will be signed in the shortest possible time.

“A pipeline is already existing, but we have changed the configurat­ion and the teams are already working on the project,” he said.

Dr Masuka said during the ministers’ interactiv­e meeting, they also discussed the Presidenti­al

programmes such as Rural Developmen­t 8.0 and how they could be accelerate­d.

“We also had a very long discussion on land issues including distributi­on and the need for people to occupy land legally and the consequenc­es for those that do not follow the establishe­d procedures,” he said.

 ?? ?? Gwayi Shangani dam
Gwayi Shangani dam
 ?? ?? Cofferdam and foundation constructi­on at Ziminya dam
Cofferdam and foundation constructi­on at Ziminya dam
 ?? ?? A worker at Zhovhe Farm feeds fish that are part of a Government fisheries project
A worker at Zhovhe Farm feeds fish that are part of a Government fisheries project

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