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Maize
shortage renews debate over GM in Zimbabwe
IRIN
News
March 04, 2013
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=97588
A major shortage
of maize has sent the price of maize meal, used for porridge and
poultry feed, spiralling in Zimbabwe, prompting traders to lobby
the government to consider importing genetically modified (GM) maize.
Zimbabwe, along
with Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia, has long resisted importing
GM maize. Most of the maize grown in neighbouring South Africa -
which is the largest maize producer in the region, and which usually
has a surplus to export - is GM. Though South Africa can provide
certified GM-free maize, it is more expensive than the maize produced
in Malawi or Zambia, all of which is GM-free.
A dry spell
and lack of fertilizers in 2012 led to a poor harvest in Zimbabwe,
and aid agencies expect the number of food insecure people to rise
to almost 1.67 million by March. Zimbabwean traders usually import
from Zambia to meet demand during shortages, but Zambia has imposed
restrictions on maize exports.
The grain milling
industry in Zimbabwe, which includes maize-meal and livestock-feed
manufacturers, says their current stocks will not last until the
new harvest season in May-June. The country's Agricultural Marketing
Association has warned the government of an impending crisis.
The grain milling
industry says it requires about 150,000 metric tons of maize between
now and until the new harvest to meet consumers' needs. Market
sources say the Grain Marketing Board has only 92,000 metric tons
of maize in its reserves, and it has stopped maize sales to save
for a grain-loan scheme.
Zambia's
restrictions
The price of
maize was around US$260 a ton in 2012, but has escalated to $380
per ton, said Fungai Mungate, chairman of the Stock Feed Manufacturers
Association (SMA) in Zimbabwe. "There is a major shortage of
maize on the market. For the past few years now, the industry has
depended on local maize supplies and imports from Zambia. But due
to problems in Zambia, between November and December 2012, that
country imposed some kind of restriction or an unofficial ban on
maize exports to Zimbabwe. As we speak, there has been no maize
coming from Zambia officially."
Zambia is facing
its own maize shortages despite consecutive bumper harvests in the
past three seasons. Researchers Auckland Kuteya and T.S. Jayne of
Zambia's Indaba Agricultural Policy Research Institute attribute
the country's maize meal shortages to the government's
own marketing and subsidy policies.
For the last two years, the Zambian government's Food Reserve Agency
(FRA) has been buying huge quantities of maize at high prices from
farmers, then selling the maize to millers at deeply subsidized
rates. Meanwhile, the FRA's storage losses have been extremely
high, with an estimated 25 percent of its maize purchases spoiled
or of poor quality.
The UN's Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) says the government's efforts
were meant to counteract a potential price hike, expecting the huge
surplus would attract foreign traders. The government also felt
the need to maintain stable supplies.
But the removal
of huge quantities of maize from the market (the FRA bought 1.75
million tons in the 2011-2012 marketing year; and then one million
tons for the 2012-2013 marketing year) created shortages. Both traders
and millers have hiked their prices, despite the government's threats
to cancel millers' licences.
And very little
of the government subsidy given to millers has been passed on to
consumers. As a result, the government has spent two percent of
its GDP subsidizing maize despite experiencing the shortages and
high prices.
State
of GM
Zimbabwe allows
a maximum of 0.01 percent trace of GM material in its maize imports.
Both the Grain Millers Association and SMA have appealed to the
government to temporarily revise this threshold to 2 percent.
SMA's Mungate
said recent surveys by his organization of maize availability in
South Africa at the 0.01 percent GM threshold found only 14,000
metric tons available at prices between $400 and $450 per metric
ton.
The government
has yet to respond to the request.
During a particularly
severe drought in 2002, Zimbabwe said they would allow imports of
GM food aid only in milled form, as this eliminated the risk of
grain germination and limited possible contamination of local varieties.
Ordinary Zimbabweans
are struggling to access cheap grain. In Chitungwiza, an urban centre
outside the capital, Harare, Gogo Keresencia Dziruni's six-member
household relies on her disabled husband's $100-a-month pension.
"I remember
that not so long ago, we used to buy a 10kg bag of roller meal [unrefined
maize meal] for $4.50, and now you cannot get it for below $6. As
a basic necessity, maize meal should not be allowed to move that
much because it is staple food for many people," she said.
Dziruni says
she would support the importation of GM maize if that would bring
the price of maize meal down.
Another resident,
Masiiwa Ganyau, remarked that salaries have remained unchanged in
the face of these price increases.
The price hikes
have also affected poultry farming in Zimbabwe. Mungate said the
poultry industry has become a major source of livelihood for the
poor and for communal farmers. But sixty percent of the feed for
poultry is derived from maize, and the increasing maize cost has
caused feed prices to climb between two and five percent. The livestock
feed industry said it needs 40,000 tons of maize between February
and the next harvest to meet demand.
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