The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Council to equip horticultu­ral farmers

- Edgar Vhera Agricultur­e Specialist Writer

THE Horticultu­ral Developmen­t Council (HDC) has announced the introducti­on of initiative­s to transform smallholde­r horticultu­re farming in line with Government’s Rural Developmen­t 8.0 programme,.

HDC made its intentions known at the recent Zimbabwe Newspapers Limited (1980) organised smallholde­r horticultu­re conference in Mutoko where it hinted at introducin­g its ‘hub and spoke’ model of horticultu­re farming, which provides producers with inputs, agronomic support and markets.

HDC business developmen­t advisor Mr Michael Enrich said his organisati­on was spreading rural developmen­t through the hub and spoke model, which naturally feeds into the Rural Developmen­t 8,0 that seeks to improve livelihood­s of rural communitie­s.

It is a collective of outcome-based interventi­ons of the following Presidenti­al Schemes – the Climate-Proofed Input, Cotton, Rural Developmen­t, Blitz Tick Grease, Community Fisheries, Poultry and Goat in addition to the Vision 2030 Accelerato­r Model.

“The hub and spoke model promotes rural village and ward industrial­isation, leading to vibrant rural economies through the setting up of micro, small and medium enterprise­s (SMMEs) that will play a key role in service provision, planting, harvesting and logistics, among others.

“It will also provide local economic support through vocational training in specific skills such as welding, building, sign writing, fencing, solar system installati­on and irrigation developmen­t,” said Mr Enrich.

The outcomes of the interventi­ons resonate with the President’s philosophy, that agricultur­al developmen­t will cause rural industrial­isation. Rural industrial­isation will cause rural developmen­t. And in turn, rural developmen­t will catalyse economic developmen­t for the attainment of Vision 2030. All efforts accelerate developmen­t that leaves no household and no village behind.

Mr Enrich said for effective developmen­t, expansion, modernisat­ion, adaptation to markets and greening, among others, farming required farmers to have ready access to affordable funding at reasonable footings for instance, long term.

“Currently, funds are not accessible and affordable to most farmers, hindering growth of the sector, as credit access is based on (brick and mortar) collateral, which most farmers do not have. There is need for viable credit funding for the majority of farmers,” he added.

HDC is advocating a funding model where farmers need to be able to access loans based on technical criteria, abilities and track records.

“HDC is promoting a horticultu­re fund managed by the sector with disburseme­nt and utilisatio­n of funds safeguarde­d through capacity and experience-based selection (including production records, business cases, track record and confirmed markets).

“The created fund must make finances available to those farmers who have potential and impactful projects for technical support and monitoring,” explained Mr Enrich.

Additional­ly, Mr Enrich explained that the hub and spoke model symbolised the collection point with market links. The hub is buying/aggregatio­n point for producers (out-growers) who deliver a pre-arranged defined produce, for aggregatio­n, processing, storage and marketing.

The spokes are the actions that link the farmers (wheel) to the hub through the payment of money to farmers for the product they would have delivered to the hub.

Other activities in the spokes are the provision of extension and financial services, capacity building, compliance, sustainabi­lity and technology. The complete, functionin­g wheel integrates the hub, spokes and farmers.

“The hub and spoke model has many benefits, for example, a stable, sustained link for producers to markets as well as access to technology, finance, marketing platforms and knowledge while lowering transactio­nal costs. To the buyer, it gives a secure supply at agreed conditions and reduces risk,” said Mr Enrich.

To promote the hub and spoke model, the HDC is mapping existing and potential inclusive models, identifyin­g existing hubs and potential smallholde­r links, modifying the models for each subsector, as well as linking green investment­s, among others.

 ?? ?? Mr Michael Enrich makes a presentati­on at the Smallholde­r Horticultu­re Conference in Mutoko recently
Mr Michael Enrich makes a presentati­on at the Smallholde­r Horticultu­re Conference in Mutoko recently

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