|
Back to Index
Upbeat
about the 2011 harvest
IRIN
News
January 14, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=91632
Timely access to fertilizers, seeds and good rains
have set Zimbabwe on course for a good harvest, say agriculture
officials.
The Agriculture Minister, Joseph Made, told journalists
the area planted with cereals such as sorghum and maize had increased
by thousands of hectares this season from 2009-2010.
However, he cautioned that a good crop was only
expected if rains persisted during January. Zimbabwe's Meteorological
Services has predicted heavy rains in the coming weeks.
The area planted
with maize was up from 530,000ha in 2009 - 2010 to 660,000ha this
season, said Made. Other grains had also seen their coverage increase
from 110,000ha to 174,000ha.
In a decade marked by socio-economic instability,
food production has begun to improve in Zimbabwe in the past two
years.
A joint mission in 2010 by the UN World Food Programme
and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reported that after
the 2008 season, when less than 500,000 tons of maize was harvested,
production more than doubled in 2009 and 2010, to 1.27 and 1.35
million tons respectively
Although expensive, maize seeds and fertilizers,
unlike in previous years, have been available in the market.
The pro-ZANU-PF
daily newspaper, The Herald, reported in December 2010 that the
government had provided loans worth US$122.2 million to farmers
for support during the 2010 - 2011 season, with banks providing
$286 million to buy inputs.
More than 900,000 poor households have been given
agricultural inputs, noted the FAO in its latest update.
But FAO said it was concerned about food price increases:
between September and November 2010, the price of maize rose by
some 26 percent in the capital, Harare, after having been stable
in the previous months.
The price of maize meal, a staple food, has begun
to climb in the past two months.
An estimated 1.7 million Zimbabweans will face severe
food insecurity in the peak hunger period of January to March 2011,
according to the 2011 UN Consolidated Appeal for Zimbabwe. About
38 percent of the $415 million appeal will take care of food-related
needs - down from 50 percent in the last appeal for 2010.
The peak hunger period is when crops are planted
and nurtured to maturity.
The appeal in December 2010 has received a little
more than $680,000 funding so far, with pledges worth $2.9 million.
Army-worm
outbreak
There has been a scare for the agriculturally rich
provinces of Mashonaland Central and East in the north after army-worm
caterpillars destroyed more than 50ha of planted maize. Farmers
in the region said it was one of the most serious attacks in recent
years.
The Herald newspaper
said the attack threatened national food security, with another
800ha of planted sorghum, maize and pasture land at risk. But it
quoted an agricultural official, Godfrey Chikwenhere, giving assurances
that they had enough chemicals to deal with the caterpillars.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|