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food shortages anticipated
IRIN News
March 13, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77256
Johannesburg
- Erratic weather is likely to hurt Zimbabwe's harvest this year,
with the country ending up with an even higher maize deficit than
in 2007, according to the latest report from the USAID-funded Famine
Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS-NET).
Heavy rainfall, with
flooding in several districts, in December 2007 forced many farmers
to scale down their planned crop area, as they were unable to prepare
the land and apply fertilizer, FEWS-NET's Food Security Update for
February 2008 commented.
Despite the setback,
a Zimbabwean government assessment said the area planted to maize,
the staple crop, had increased by six percent compared to the 2006/07
cropping season. An earlier crop assessment by the government, which
media reports last week seized on, reportedly said only 14 percent
of land targeted for maize had been planted by December.
However, the impact of
a dry spell in February, which affected cereal crops in various
stages of growth across the country, has yet to be assessed, said
a regional agricultural expert who did not want to be named. "So
no one can actually predict what the deficit could be."
Zimbabwe had a grain
deficit of about 891,000 tonnes in 2007 - almost 50 percent below
the 2006 harvest - on account of adverse weather, severe economic
constraints that led to shortages of key inputs, deteriorating infrastructure,
especially in irrigation and, most importantly, financially unviable
government-controlled prices, said a joint Crop and Food supply
assessment mission by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP).
Food production declined
in Zimbabwe after a land reform programme began in 2000, where white-owned
farms were redistributed among black farmers. Most new farmers have
been unable to utilise the prime land allocated to them because
of lack of inputs and incentives. Poor rains over several seasons
also hit output.
The commercial farming
sector now produces less than one-tenth of the maize it harvested
in the 1990s, and less than five percent of the country's total
maize production, said the joint FAO/WFP 2007 assessment report,
which based its findings on government data.
The country needs at
least two million tonnes of maize to meet its national requirements
and has had to import food from Malawi and Zambia. "It is too
early to forecast ... [2008] production and the food deficit,"
said Kisan Gunjal, who led the joint assessment mission to Zimbabwe.
"However, judging
from the various factors, such as better rainfall distribution ...
[in 2008], as opposed to a significant drought ... [in 2007], and
some 6 percent increase in maize planted area according to the official
estimate, the production ... [in 2008] is likely to be close to
an average of the past five years."
The FAO's Crop Prospects
and Food Situation report for February 2008 has also predicted low
harvests in 2008 because of the high price of inputs such as fertiliser,
seed, fuel and tillage power, and severe flooding in many districts.
More
imports needed?
The
Zimbabwean government and humanitarian agencies have managed to
move an adequate amount of cereal into the country, according to
the FEWS-NET report, and an outstanding cereal deficit of about
278,000 tonnes is likely to be met. The government has brought in
239,827 tonnes of maize from Malawi, with the balance of 166,403
tonnes to come.
The 2008/09 marketing
year will start with low stocks. "While the outcome of this
year's very wet season is not known, there will be localised deficits,
and the country will again need to import a significant amount of
cereal, likely to be more than was required ... [in 2007], to meets
its needs."
Accessibility to food
has been affected by the inability of the state-controlled cereals
agency, the Grain Marketing Board, to deal with transport and fuel
shortages, exacerbated by further damage to the already poor state
of the road network by heavy rains in the country since December
2007, the FEWS-NET report noted.
Food
security and prices
Food
security in urban areas remains critical, given the shortages and
erratic supplies of basic commodities on the formal market, and
inadequate humanitarian support in these areas.
Inflation has reached
more than 100,000 percent in Zimbabwe. "However, irrespective
of the exact rate of increase, it is obvious that the nominal cost
of living is rising at much faster rate than people's incomes and
their purchasing power," Gunjal commented.
Despite the government's
imposition of price controls in 2007, the availability and supply
of basic commodities on the formal market remained erratic. "A
few commodities such as milk and bread have become more available
in January 2008, though the selling prices are unaffordable to most
poor households, and rapidly rising: the cost of a standard loaf
of bread increased by over 300 percent from October 2007 to early
January 2008."
Other basic commodities
such as sugar, cooking oil, maizemeal and meat have remained scarce
in the formal market but were available on the parallel market,
where prices are still rocketing. The prices of white sugar, cooking
oil and beef went up by between 60 percent and 250 percent from
November 2007 to January 2008.
To address the scarcity
of food and other essential commodities in urban areas, the Zimbabwean
government plans to introduce "people's markets", which
would sell basic goods at fairly affordable prices, FEWS-NET said.
WFP spokesman Richard
Lee pointed out that it was difficult to determine an accurate number
of people in need of food in the urban areas, which was why they
had not considered food aid distribution, and preferred to focus
on the large numbers in need in the rural areas, where food was
inaccessible.
In February 2008 WFP
managed to provide food aid to 2.4 million people in Zimbabwe's
grain-deficient rural areas and, along with the Consortium for Southern
Africa Food Security Emergency, which is funded by the US Agency
for International Development, intended to feed more than 3.5 million
people in March.
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