The Government of Zimbabwe through the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Resettlement (MoLAFWRR) with technical support from FAO launched a Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP) aimed at strengthening agricultural extension services in Zimbabwe. The objective of the project is to improve access to extension and advisory services by smallholder agricultural producers in the country. The TCP, funded to the tune of US$500,000 will be implemented from January 2021 to December 2022 in four districts namely Uzumba Maramba Pfungwe and Mutoko in Mashonaland East province and Hurungwe and Chegutu in Mashonaland West province.
In the wake of COVID-19, Dr. John Basera, Permanent Secretary in the MoLAFWRR, officially launched the project virtually. Berhanu Berdane welcomed the delegates on behalf of FAO Sub-regional Coordinator for Southern Africa and Country Representative for Zimbabwe, Dr. Patrice Talla. In attendance were senior government officials, provincial and district MoLAFWRR officials and FAO technical experts.
“The government of Zimbabwe is very much aware of the critical and pivotal role agricultural extension and advisory services play in imparting practical knowledge and skills to farmers and are some of the key drivers of agricultural growth in the various plans and strategies. The extension capacitation drive entails increasing the mobility of extension staff through the provision of motorcycles and fuel, increased interventions towards appropriate and relevant training opportunities as well as equipping extension officers with digital technologies for effective technical backstopping of farmers to adopt Good Agricultural Practices,” said Dr. Basera in his keynote address during the launch.
Revamping the agricultural sector is critical for reviving Zimbabwe’s economy. Frequent droughts and unstable macroeconomic conditions have continued to hinder the country’s ability to effectively deal with the pervasive low productivity in the sector resulting from many factors including, high cost of inputs, inadequate availability of quality inputs, unstable prices, liquidity challenges and weakened extension system. The Government of Zimbabwe with support from FAO has taken major steps in this by outlining the intentions and strategic focus for steering and implementing the Agriculture and Food Systems Transformation Strategy (2020-2030).
“The project will provide technical assistance to some innovative options to deal with the systemic extension challenges in the medium to long term. This initial technical assistance will prioritize enabling of extension services to reach more smallholder farmers, innovate with ICT platforms and support the initial steps for digitalization of the extension system,” said Berhanu Bedane in his remarks on behalf of Patrice Talla.
“The project will also cover the soil fertility enhancement initiative (soil pH correction blitz) which will equip 10 decentralized soil testing facilities throughout the country. In addition, farmers will be trained on emerging issues relating to climate proofing, agroecology, and soil pH correction to enhance productivity,” he added.
During the launch, the Permanent Secretary reiterated the importance of collaboration and partnerships in achieving the Zimbabwe 2030 agenda as well as meeting the SDG targets especially SDG17, which focuses on strengthening the means of implementation and revitalizing the global partnership for sustainable development. FAO will continue to provide support to government with other development partners. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the model for farmer engagement will require innovative solutions given the challenges faced by the government extension staff. With demand-driven approaches, and pluralistic extension and advisory services, NGOs and private sector extension service providers will be coming on board.
SOURCE: FAO Regional Office for Africa
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