Zimbabwe is facing a drought (Tafadzwa Ufumeli/Getty Images).
Zimbabwe’s president declared a state of national disaster
over a drought that’s curbed farm output in the southern African nation.
The announcement follows similar declarations last month in
neighbouring Zambia and Malawi, where poor rainfall has cut production of the
staple corn and other grains and contributed to higher food prices that have
hurt poor households. The El Niño weather phenomenon resulted in swathes of
southern African experiencing its driest February in decades this year.
“More than 80% of the country received below normal
rainfall. Our nation faces a food cereal deficit,” Zimbabwean President
Emmerson Mnangagwa said in the capital, Harare, on Wednesday. “This
deficit will be supplemented by imports.”
The country will need $2 billion to mitigate the impact of
the drought, he added.
Zimbabwe has lost 12% of planted farmland corn due to the
dry spell, according to the Ministry of Agriculture. The country consumes 2.2
million tons of grain annually, with 1.8 million tons used for food and 400 000
tons used for livestock feed.
READ | As El Niño bites, SA may be forced to import white
maize for first time in years
Plans to export surplus corn and wheat from past harvests to
Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo have been halted, said Mnangagwa.
That would have been the first corn exports by Zimbabwe since 2001.
Neighbouring South Africa has warned it may be forced to
import corn for the first time since 2017 because of the drought.
Source link : https://www.news24.com/fin24/climate_future/news/zimbabwe-declares-drought-a-disaster-joining-malawi-and-zambia-20240403
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Publish date : 2024-04-03 07:00:00
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