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Poor
winter wheat harvest expected to increase food shortages
IRIN News
August 06, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73601
Unreliable electricity
supplies have wrought havoc on Zimbabwe's winter wheat crop, and
the country, already unable to feed more than a quarter of its population,
is set to record one of its worst harvests.
Earlier this year the
national power utility, Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA),
introduced daily 20-hour power cuts for domestic consumers, to give
priority to the electricity requirements of irrigation farmers producing
winter wheat.
However, farmers say
crop production has failed because ZESA was unable to maintain a
regular power supply to the farmers.
Renson Gasela, a farmer
in Midlands Province and former chief executive for cereals at the
state-run Grain Marketing Board, told IRIN, "We have enough
water in the dams but we do not have enough electricty supplies
to irrigate the winter wheat, and many farmers have written off
their winter crop, which was affected by moisture stress or inadequate
water supply."
The winter wheat crop
is expected to come in well below last year's poor harvest of 78,000
metric tonnes (mt), Gasela said.
The UN World Food Programme
(WFP) made an urgent US$118 million appeal last week to provide
immediate assistance to 3.3 million of about 4.1 million Zimbabweans
who will face severe food shortages from November to March 2008.
The WFP had factored in a winter wheat production by Zimbabwe of
about 128,000mt, but the harvest is expected to fall well short
of those estimates.
Wilson Nyabonda, president
of the Zimbabwe Indigenous Commercial Farmers Union, told The Sunday
Mail, a government-owned newspaper, that new farmers had received
all the government inputs ahead of schedule, only to be let down
by erratic power supplies.
Inputs
arrived on time
"For the first time,
farmers received seed, fertiliser and chemicals well before May
[the planting month]; most farmers accessed fuel as well, which
they received without paying cash upfront," he told the newspaper.
He said farmers began
to experience problems with their winter wheat crop when power supplies
became unreliable. "This is where things fell apart, as electricity
was only available in the first days of May. From there onwards
it became a nightmare for farmers."
In Manicaland Province,
the Agricultural Rural Development Authority (ARDA), the parastatal
mandated to produce staple foods to ensure food security, also fell
victim to inadequate water supplies because of ZESA's sporadic power
supplies and hundred of hectares of wheat failed to germinate. ARDA's
CEO, Joseph Matowanyika, was fired last month.
Vice-president Joyce
Mujuru has embarked on a nationwide tour of ZESA's power plants
to assess the country's ability to generate electricity.
Severe foreign currency
shortages have made replacing outdated equipment at the country's
thermal power stations unaffordable, and although Zimbabwe has large
deposits of coal, it cannot be extracted because the lack of foreign
currency has also made maintenance or replacement of mining equipment
very difficult.
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