Govt sets three-year irrigation hectarage target

GOVERNMENT is accelerating the development of irrigation and water infrastructure to cover a total of 350 000 hectares of farming land in the next three seasons to boost agriculture production.


The Minister of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Resettlement, Dr Anxious Masuka, said the new irrigation infrastructure was being constructed countrywide. In some areas, he said, they were replacing obsolete equipment.

In an interview during the tour of Beitbridge agriculture projects last Friday, the minister said the developments were in line with Vision 2030.

He visited Toppick Investment’s highly-integrated farm, Bishopstone Estate (citrus farm), Zhovhe Dam, and Schweppes’ Beitbridge Juice plant.

The minister said Zimbabwe and the Government of Kuwait have put together US$35 million for the construction of a 2500-hectare irrigation project at Zhovhe and a 63km canal that will supply water to Beitbridge Town.

The canal is also expected to supply water to commercial farms, smallholder farmers, and villages on its course to the border town.

“The context is that the New Dispensation has put in place an empowered upper-middle economy by 2030 as a vision,” said Minister Masuka.

“To enable that, agriculture is at the centre of that vision. To do so, irrigation and water
development must be accelerated.

“It’s in this context that we have the 350 000 hectares as a target for the next three seasons.”

Dr Masuka said the Zhovhe Dam, with a carrying capacity of 133 million cubic metres, has been idle for the past 25 years until the Government and the Kuwait partner managed to put together the funding last year.

At the moment the dam is being used by Toppick Investments for irrigation and a few fishing cooperatives.

The minister also expressed concern at the slow progress at which the Zhovhe water project is being implemented.

He said although an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) had been done, he was not happy with the quality of the works.

“My visit today was to assess progress on the EIA and the detailed designs within targeted irrigation areas,” said Minister Masuka.

“I am not happy with the progress and the quality of the work and I have given the team a deadline that by September 30, they should have submitted and updated designs and completed the EIA.

“For far too long, people in this dry region have watched the water flowing and flowing into the Indian Ocean without even utilising it to uplift their lives.”

Dr Masuka said the Government expects to ascertain the nature of the problem delaying the progress in the next six weeks.

He said by then they will need to know the exact route of the canal to Beitbridge. The development of irrigation infrastructure at the Zhovhe Water Project cannot be delayed any longer, he said.

“I have made it clear to the project team that we cannot go into the summer of 2022
without utilising this water at Zhovhe Dam.” — chronicle.co.zw

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