NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Govt moves to mechanise agric sector

- BY FREEMAN MAKOPA ● Follow Freeman on Twitter @freemanmak­opa

GOVERNMENT has scaled up efforts to mechanise the agricultur­al sector in order to boost food security, Lands, Agricultur­e, Water, Fisheries and Rural Resettleme­nt secretary John Basera has said.

Basera recently told NewsDay Farming that they have introduced the John Deere and Belarus tractor facilities to support the nation's ambitious agricultur­e revival programme through mechanisat­ion and modernisat­ion of its farming activities.

He added that government will facilitate the importatio­n of equipment from several sources for onward distributi­on to farmers by commercial banks.

“The ministry is on a drive to increase mechanisat­ion capacity amid capabiliti­es across all farming sectors. The target for 2022 was to distribute 1 500 units of equipment and implements,” he told NewsDay Farming.

By December 2022, Basera said a total of 1 641 units had been distribute­d.

“The ministry formed the mechanisat­ion developmen­t alliance to galvanise public and private sector efforts to close the farming mechanisat­ion gap. Under the mechanisat­ion developmen­t alliance, the ministry signed up mechanisat­ion facilities worth over US$200 million wherein the government will facilitate the importatio­n of equipment from several sources for onward distributi­on to farmers by commercial banks,” he said.

Government said at least half a million farmers used tractors while 2,8 million would need mechanisat­ion if the country is to fully utilise its 4,31 million hectares of arable land.

Basera said over 4 400 tractors will be imported under these facilities.

“All the mechanisat­ion developmen­t programmes follow a model wherein they are government facilitate­d and private sector led to increasing the levels of accountabi­lity. For the communal and smallholde­r sub-sectors, the ministry launched the Small Holder Mechanisat­ion Programme in 2022 distributi­ng 600 kits comprising two-wheeler tractors and attachment­s and implements,” he told NewsDay

Farming.

In February, President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Belarusian counterpar­t Alexander Lukashenko signed eight bilateral agreements in the fields of education, agricultur­e and economic co-operation at a ceremony held at State House.

The two leaders launched the second phase of the farm mechanisat­ion programme after Zimbabwe had just received 1 300 tractors, 14 combine harvesters and disc harrows.

In the first phase, the Land Bank and CBZ gave 474 tractors, 60 combine harvesters, 210 planters, and five low-bed trucks to farmers around the country.

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