The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Investment­s key to boost agric output

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SEVERAL irrigation projects have been lined up this year as part of efforts to boost agricultur­al production and increase the sector’s contributi­on to Gross Domestic Product as well as achieve food security and reduce reliance on rain-fed agricultur­e.

Climate change, which has often resulted in adverse weather conditions, has been affecting the Sub- Saharan region, including Zimbabwe.

Irrigation is considered the key to offsetting further losses caused by droughts.

Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube acknowledg­ed that climate change was reducing crop and livestock production. The recently launched Agricultur­e and Food Systems Transforma­tion Strategy and the Agricultur­e Recovery Plan provide a roadmap for agricultur­e for the period through 2030.

The plans envisage increasing agricultur­al output to US$8,2 billion by 2025 and improving its contributi­on to GDP from the current 12 percent to 20 percent.

“Recent droughts have reinforced the importance of maximising usage of existing water bodies, soil and climate conditions towards increased agricultur­al productivi­ty and output.

“Despite the huge potential of irrigation, our interventi­ons to date have failed to leverage on this potential,” said Professor Ncube in the 2021 Zimbabwe Infrastruc­ture Investment Programme.

Out of the two million hectares that can be developed from existing water bodies, only 242 000 hectares are developed and equipped with irrigation infrastruc­ture, with 175 000 hectares being functional. But the Irrigation Rehabilita­tion and Developmen­t Plan seeks to increase area under irrigation and crop production from the current 242 000ha to 350 000ha by 2025.

The Government will spearhead the rehabilita­tion and revitalisa­tion of 450 irrigation schemes in communal areas, including the overhaul of business models for such schemes to ensure viability and sustainabi­lity. This should help smallholde­r communal farmers treat agricultur­e as a business and get the maximum possible benefit from their produce, including achieved household food security. The plan targets rehabilita­ting 45 000ha on A1 and A2 farms, as well as capacitati­ng farmers through access to financial support, equipment and markets.

New irrigation infrastruc­ture covering 120 000 ha in marginal areas will be developed. Professor Ncube says success of these initiative­s hinges on sustainabl­e and efficient use of existing water bodies, adoption of modern irrigation systems as well as creating a conducive regulatory environmen­t that attracts private sector participat­ion in irrigation developmen­t and ensures farmers’ access to finance, inputs and markets.

The soon-to-be launched agricultur­e commoditie­s exchange — Zimbabwe Mercantile Exchange (ZMX) and Warehousin­g Receipt System (WRS) — also seeks to address some of the challenges farmers face in accessing funding for retooling and mechanisat­ion, as well as bottleneck­s in marketing their produce.

The system, experts say, will improve smallholde­r farmers’ access to finance, enhance transparen­cy and informatio­n system and improve farmer livelihood­s through transparen­t price discovery.

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