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Lack
of inputs threatens next year's harvest - experts
IRIN News
October 26, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56074
BULAWAYO - Zimbabwean agricultural
experts have warned that the prohibitive cost and non-availability
of farming inputs like fertiliser could affect next year's harvest.
Thulani Mkhwananzi, spokesperson for
the government's Agricultural Research Extension in the western
province of Matabeleland North, told IRIN: "The situation is really
bad here, especially considering that the farmers have little support
from government. What they need most is seeds at relatively low
prices, because most of them are poor and unemployed.
"It is just a few who rely on remittances
from their relatives outside the country who manage to secure all
the necessary implements," he added.
Seed Co., the country's main seed supplier,
has warned of a serious deficit and was quoted in the official Herald
newspaper as saying that the country needed to import 10,000mt of
maize seed to meet the demand in the current planting season.
Two months ago, the agricultural ministry
also terminated a three-year old policy of providing free fertilisers
and seeds to farmers who had been allocated land under the fast-track
land reform programme that began in 2000.
Most agricultural inputs are imported
and beyond the financial reach of many farmers, who are suffering
the combined effects of Zimbabwe's steadily deteriorating economy
and last season's low yields after widespread shortages of chemicals,
fertilisers and seed. Independent estimates suggest only 800,000mt
of maize was harvested this year, or about two-thirds of the country's
annual requirement; the government has insisted that around 1.8
million mt were produced.
Despite denials of a shortfall by government
officials, a recent USAID-funded report on informal trade in Southern
Africa said Zimbabwe would have to import cereals. According to
the South African Grain Information Service, Zimbabwe has imported
nearly 100,000mt from South Africa since April this year.
The May 2006 Zimbabwe Vulnerability
assessment, yet to be released, identified 1.4 million people as
critically in need of food assistance.
With less than a month before the farming
season starts, Thandolwenkosi Nkomazana, a subsistence farmer in
Matabeleland North, is still battling to secure seeds, fertiliser
and spare parts for his worn-out ox-drawn plough. His main problem,
he said, is not necessarily the availability or non-availability
of the inputs, but the cost.
"Seeds are available at the shopping
centre, including spares for a plough, but the problem is that I
don't have money to buy them. They are just too expensive. In fact,
many villagers here can barely afford [the inputs], and the worry
is that planting will be starting very soon," said Nkomazana.
His dilemma is shared by subsistence
farmers across the country. Despite an attempt by government to
impose price controls on agricultural inputs, producers have repeatedly
hiked prices, arguing that they want to keep pace with inflation,
currently at over 1,000 percent annually.
A 10kg bag of maize seed costs an almost
unaffordable Z$10,000 [about US$40], and the same amount of fertiliser
goes for Z$40,000 [about US$160]. Surveys by IRIN in revealed that
seeds were still available in most shops in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's
second city, and in rural areas.
Agriculture minister Joseph Made told
IRIN that the government was aware of the problems farmers were
facing, and said his ministry, Seed Co. and other related companies
were discussing the issue of prohibitive prices.
"We are working towards the harmonisation
of prices, so that all farmers, peasant or commercial, can buy all
the implements they need without forking out a lot of money," he
said. "We are not neglecting any farmer."
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