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A short messaging
system can provide necessary information to farmers using mobile phones. |
By DOREEN NAWA
WITH the country’s economy growing steadily,
and urban cities struggling to cope with the influx of urban drifters
who are looking for jobs, the small-scale farmer is often shrouded in
the dust.
Zambia has the ideal makings of a robust farming
community, but faces many challenges, even when blessed with arable
land, water, and abundant human resources.
Studies show that small-scale farmers have been instrumental in food
production countrywide and if supported adequately, could contribute
significantly to the national food basket.
The question is - how can
Zambian small-scale farmers modernize in keeping up with the trends of
the 21 century and thereby help reduce poverty?
Cross Border
Association President Felix Daka says the first step in changing the
face of small-scale farming in Zambia is through financing.
“Hybrid
seeds, fertilizers, water-pumps, and simple improvements in farming
techniques often cost money, which most small-scale farmers simply don’t
have. Modern commercial farmers in the rest of the world don’t farm
with their own money. It’s nearly always borrowed from banks or local
mutual societies,” Mr Daka said.
Financial institutions need to appreciate that small-scale farmers are a viable clientele whom they could do business with.
Technology
is another challenge that hinders progression of small-scale farmers.
Technology has had a profound impact on the lives of the Zambian
society, with the widespread use of mobile phones.
With the high
number of unbanked farmers who bury money in their homesteads and lack
of information on market trends, the introduction of an information
system for farmers could not have come at the right time.
Given the
existing need, the Zambia National Farmers Union (ZNFU) has developed an
initiative called ZNFU4455 to provide necessary information to farmers.
ZNFU4455
is a Short Message Service (SMS) trading system designed to provide
information to small-scale farmers on current crop prices and market
places using mobile phones.
“If illegal miners on the Copperbelt can
have access to the latest spot prices on the London Metal Exchange, it
is also possible to provide similar information to small-scale farmers.
They (farmers) need to know the latest prices,” Mr Daka said.
And
Government is reviewing the national agriculture policy, bearing in mind
concerns that have been raised by small-scale farmers.
Minister of
Agriculture and Livestock Wylbur Simuusa said, “The review of the
Agriculture Policy 2004-2015 is being done in order to address the needs
of the small-scale farmers, taking into account the emerging trends in
the sector such as environment and climate change, decentralisation,
globalisation and changes in the legal environment.”
“There are
several challenges that have constrained the performance of the
agriculture sector and its contribution to poverty reduction. But I wish
to say that Government and several other cooperating partners have made
efforts aimed at transforming the sector,” Mr Simuusa said.
Like
many other developing countries, Zambia’s agriculture sector is
constrained by poor infrastructure, inadequate storage facilities
especially in rural areas where agriculture is the mainstay of the
economy.
Other challenges include low levels of investment, lack of access to affordable credit and limited access to modern technology.
The pervasive hand-held-hoe, the small-scale farmer’s workhorse across the country, continues to be an important for farming.
Its
simplicity, efficiency and costs are still too competitive to be
replaced. But those are the same features of many innovative tools being
developed in Brazil, India, and elsewhere in Africa.
Simple compact
tractors that can be economically used on small lands, better grain
storage bins, and hand-cranked maize shucking equipment, are all
examples of equipment that today’s smallholder farmers can use to join
the modern world.
Senior advisor at International Fund for
Agricultural Development (IFAD), Brian Baldwin said lack of capital
investment had continued affecting the growth of the small-scale farmers
in the country.
“The objective of the workshop is to have an
opportunity to discuss the main findings and recommendations from Zambia
country programme evaluation and reflect on their implications,” Mr
Baldwin said.
Officer-in-charge, independence office of evaluation of
IFAD, Kees Tuinenburg said even though IFAD was a relatively small
financial partner in Zambia ,the country programme had made an important
contribution to the development of agriculture and rural development.
Mr
Tuinenburg said cooperation between IFAD and government plays a central
role for a more effective and efficient use of the government systems.
In
an era where commercial farmers are increasingly relying on satellites
and drones to improve yields and cut costs, small incremental
improvements are the key for Zambia’s small-scale farmers.
Meeting
Zambian small-scale farmers where they are and moving them into the 21st
century has to be the future for Zambian agriculture.
Evidenced
from Catherine Mudenda, a dairy farmer in Kalomo, dairy farmers in
Kalomo and most of the parts in Southern province have built
cooperatives.
“Parmalat buys milk from us and I can safely say that
we have built the whole dairy industry with milk provided by
smallholders for Parmalat which in turn supplies the whole country,” Mrs
Mudenda said.
The Parmalat Group is a global player in the production and distribution of milk and other dairy products.
Of
course, the challenge is much bigger than this, and must include
government commitment to improve infrastructure and education. Simple
steps can turn Zambia’s small-scale farmers into modern farmers.
Farmers therefore need to be equipped with modern farming methods as well as being integrated into the mainstream economy.
Agriculture in Zambia is one of the key priority sectors that contribute to economic growth and poverty reduction.
And small-scale farmers play a vital role in promoting food security
yet they have to cope with numerous challenges ranging from farming
inputs to market access.
Given the right conditions and targeted support, smallholder farmers can engineer a sustainable agricultural revolution.