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More
food production, but not enough
IRIN
News
August 10, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90125
Zimbabwe's production
of maize, its staple food, has improved "significantly",
but the country is still food insecure and about 1.68 million people
will require assistance in the first quarter of 2011, the UN Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP)
said in a national
crop and food security situation report released on 9 August.
"Compared with the
poor 2008 season, when less than 500,000 metric tons of maize was
harvested, production more than doubled in 2009 and 2010 to 1.27
and 1.35 million tons respectively," FAO/WFP said in a statement.
In the first quarter of 2009 about 7 million people - more than
half the population - depended on food assistance.
"Zimbabwe has only
1.66 million tons of cereals available, as against a total needs
forecast of 2.09 million tons in marketing year 2010/11 (April/March).
That leaves a 428,000 ton shortfall," Liliana Balbi, the team
leader of the FAO Global Information and Early Warning System, said
in a statement.
The increased maize production
was also attributed to a subsidized government credit system for
commercial farmers, as well as an agricultural input assistance
programme by the government, UN agencies and other humanitarian
organizations, which distributed nearly 140,000 tons of fertilizer
and top dressing, and 22,373 tons of maize seed, to more than 700,000
households.
WFP spokesman Peter Smerdon
said a greater number of people than the estimated 1.68 million
could require food assistance during the "lean season"
- the three months preceding the April 2011 harvest - depending
on variables such as food price rises.
"Despite the improved
availability of food, up to 1.68 million people will need food assistance
because prices remain comparatively high for families with low incomes
and little or no access to US dollars or South African rand,"
WFP's Jan Delbaere, co-author of the report, said in a statement.
The Zimbabwean dollar
was discontinued in 2009 as a solution to hyperinflation, and replaced
by "hard currencies", such as the US dollar, South African
rand and Botswana pula, but unemployment levels are extremely high
and many people do not have access to these currencies.
Smerdon said an appeal
to donors for food assistance would be launched soon, and would
be separate from the Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP), the humanitarian
community's most important fundraising instrument.
On 3 August the CAP for
Zimbabwe was revised upward by US$100 million to US$478 million
as result of the dry spell that afflicted parts of the country between
December 2009 and February 2010. As of 4 August, commitments to
Zimbabwe's 2010 CAP amounted to less than 42 percent of the requested
amount.
Long-term
decline in maize production
The 1.8 million hectares
planted to maize was a 30-year "historical high", the
report said, representing a 20 percent increase from the previous
year, but Smerdon told IRIN the concern was that the greater amount
of land under cultivation was not mirrored in production levels,
which had only increased seven percent from the previous year. "The
average [hectare] yield of maize has declined for the past 15 years,"
he commented.
The FAO/WFP report noted
that "Nationally, maize yields decreased to 0.75 tons/ha, from
0.82 tons/ha recorded the last season. Yields decreased in all farming
sectors, with the exception of ... commercial farms, which recorded
an average increase of 6 percent over the previous season. Nationally,
yields are just below the 10-year average (2000-2010) of 0.87 tons/ha.
Similarly, millet and sorghum yields fell."
According to the report,
the 15-year downward trend in maize production was attributed to
the introduction of price controls, which prompted commercial farmers
to grow non-price controlled crops such as tobacco, cotton and paprika.
The "more recent
decline is due to the structural change precipitated by land tenure
policies, lack of investment funds domestically and externally in
agriculture sector, and overriding economic deterioration."
Some analysts also attribute
the long-term decline in maize production to more frequent droughts,
"combined with maize production being on more marginal lands
of the communal farms, with little or no fertilizer," the report
said.
President Robert Mugabe
launched the fast-track land reform programme in 2000, which redistributed
more than 4,000 white commercial farms to landless blacks, which
set in motion a decade-long economic malaise from which the country
has yet to emerge.
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