Brazilian Innovation for Under-financed Mozambican Agriculture (2024)

Brazilian Innovation for Under-financed Mozambican Agriculture (1)

Africa, Africa's Young Farmers Seeding the Future, Aid, , , Editors' Choice, Farming Crisis: Filling An Empty Plate, Featured, Food and Agriculture, Headlines, Integration and Development Brazilian-style, , Projects, Regional Alliances, Regional Categories, South-South, , Special Report, TerraViva Europe, TerraViva United Nations, Tierramerica

Integration and Development Brazilian-style

By Amos Zacarias Reprint | | Print | |En español

Brazilian Innovation for Under-financed Mozambican Agriculture (3)

Erasmo Laldás on his strawberry farm in Naamacha, Mozambique. Credit: Amos Zacarias/IPS

MAPUTO, Mar 12 2014 (IPS) - Some of the technological excellence that revolutionised Brazil’s tropical agriculture is reaching small producers in Mozambique. But it is not enough to compensate for the underfinancing of the sector.

Last year, Erasmo Laldás, a 37-year-old farmer who has worked for 15 years in Namaacha, a village 75 kilometres from Mozambique’s capital Maputo, planted 15,000 seedlings of Festival, a new strawberry variety originated in the United States.

Laldás produced seven tonnes of strawberries, employing eight workers. He sold all his produce in Maputo, and in January was the lead vendor in that market, because there was already a shortage of the fruit in South Africa, his main competitor.

Mozambique invests very little in the agricultural sector, although it has been increasing its expenditure. In 2013 it devoted 7.6 percent of its budget to agriculture, equivalent to some six billion dollars.

“The fruit is very good quality, it does not require as many chemical products as the South African strawberries and its harvesting season is longer than the native variety that I was growing before,” he told IPS.

Laldás is the first Mozambican producer to benefit from Brazilian and U.S. aid through technical support to the Mozambique Food and Nutrition Security Programme (PSAL).

Created in 2012, the project brings together the Mozambique Institute of Agricultural Research (IIAM), the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (EMBRAPA) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), to expand production and distribution capabioities for fruit and vegetables in this African country.

First of all, studies were needed to adapt seeds to the local climate.

IIAM received more than 90 varieties of tomato, cabbage, lettuce, carrot and pepper, which are being tested at the Umbeluzi Agricultural Station, 25 kilometres from Maputo.

“The results of the trials are encouraging; we identified 17 varieties that have the desired phytosanitary characteristics, and are ready to be distributed to farmers.

“We are waiting for them to be registered and approved under the seal of Mozambique,” IIAM researcher Carvalho Ecole told IPS, regretting that his country has not registered new fruit and vegetable varieties for the past 50 years.

Fruit and vegetable growing is a key sector for generating employment and income among small farmers, as this produce represents 20 percent of family expenditure, according to Ecole.

“For a long time, horticulture was neglected. When talking about food security the government thought only about maize, sorghum and cassava,” Ecole said. Moreover, “our producers still do not have credit or financing,” he complained.

South Africa is the largest supplier of fruit and vegetables for southern Mozambique. IIAM figures show that prior to 2010, nearly all the onions, 65 percent of tomatoes and 57 percent of cabbages consumed in the cities of Maputo and Matola were South African. And those proportions have been maintained.

  • Farmers in Mozambique Fear Brazilian-Style Agriculture
  • Water – A Blessing and a Curse in Mozambique
  • Mozambican Farmers Fear Foreign Land Grabs

As a result, prices are high. A kilo of tomatoes costs between 50 and 60 meticals (between 1.60 and 2 dollars) and onions a little less. When the new varieties that have been tested are available for national small farmers, prices will be lower, Ecole said.

Mozambique also imports mangos, bananas, oranges, avocados, strawberries and other fruit from South Africa.

“We need to train and empower local small farmers so that in the years to come they can produce enough to supply the domestic market,” José Bellini, EMBRAPA’s coordinator in Mozambique, told IPS.

Agricultural cooperation is the path chosen by Brazil, ever since the Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva government (2003-2011), to consolidate its development aid policy, especially in Africa.

Embrapa, a state body made up of 47 research centres located throughout Brazil and several agencies abroad, has worked to transfer part of the knowledge of tropical agriculture accumulated over its 41 years of existence to other countries of the developing South. Its office for Africa was installed in Ghana.

But Brazil’s presence in Mozambique became unequalled with the creation of ProSAVANA, the Triangular Co-operation Programme for Agricultural Development of the Tropical Savannah in Mozambique, supported by the Brazilian and Japanese cooperation agencies (ABC and JICA, respectively), inspired by the experience that made the South American power a granary for the world and the largest exporter of soya.

The goal in the next two decades is to benefit directly 400,000 small and medium farmers and indirectly another 3.6 million, strengthening production and productivity in the northern Nacala Corridor.

Brazil is to build a laboratory for soil and plant analysis in the city of Lichinga. Embrapa is training IIAM researchers and modernising two local research centres.

But ProSAVANA is a controversial programme.

Small farmers and activists are afraid that it will reproduce Brazilian problems, such as the predominance of agribusiness, monoculture, the concentration of land tenure and production by only a few transnational companies, in a country like Mozambique where 80 percent of the population is engaged in family agriculture.

Students at the Agrarian Middle Institute in Inhambane study the development of a variety of lettuce at the Umbeluzi Agricultural Station in Mozambique. Credit: Amos Zacarias/IPS

Supporting the PSAL makes sense in a very different way. It focuses on vegetable growing, and is clearly aimed at small producers and improving local nutrition. But it suffers from limitations of scale and resources.

“We cannot improve our production system without investment. We have taken a giant step, there is more research and technology transfer, but large investments are needed as well,” said Ecole.

Mozambique invests very little in the agricultural sector, although it has been increasing its expenditure. In 2013 it devoted 7.6 percent of its budget to agriculture, equivalent to some six billion dollars.

Thirty percent of the country’s population are hungry, according to 2012 figures from the Technical Secretariat for Food and Nutrition Security. And nearly 80,000 children under the age of five die every year from malnutrition, according to Save the Children, an NGO.

There is no justification for these figures in Mozambique, which has a favourable climate and plentiful labour for large-scale agricultural production, Ecole said.

Namaacha illustrates the contradiction. It is the only district in the country that produces strawberries. It was able to supply the entire Maputo market, but many producers were bankrupted by lack of credit, said Cecília Ruth Bila, the head of the fruits section in IIAM.

“The small farmers find it difficult to get financing, and our banks do not help much, so producers give up,” she complained.

Nearly 150 strawberry farmers in Namaacha gave up growing them in the last five years because they lacked access to credit, according to information from the section.

Laldás is one of the few to continue. Perhaps that is why his dreams are so ambitious. This year he has asked for 150,000 seedlings to expand his growing area to three hectares, and meanwhile he is seeking financing to put in electricity, three greenhouses, an irrigation system and a small improvement industry.

“It will cost me a total of nearly six million meticals [nearly 200,000 dollars],” he said with optimism.

This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network.

Brazilian Innovation for Under-financed Mozambican Agriculture (2024)

FAQs

What are the agricultural issues in Mozambique? ›

Agriculture is practiced on less than 10% of the arable land and largely in flood- and drought-prone areas. Difficult access to credit and markets, low use of improved inputs and the dominance of rain-fed agriculture make the sector vulnerable to shocks.

What type of agriculture is practiced in Mozambique? ›

The major food crops produced in Mozambique include rice, maize, sorghum, and cassava; these crops cover over a third of the total cultivated land area. Maize production is most common in Tete province, while cassava is mostly grown in Nampula province.

How many smallholder farmers are in Mozambique? ›

In Mozambique, more than 3 million smallholder farmers provide 95% of agricultural production, yet yields remain low. Despite contributing very little to global warming, Mozambican farmers are faced with climate change challenges because the country is one of the most vulnerable to climatic impacts in Africa.

Does Mozambique have good farmland? ›

It holds great potential due to Mozambique's 36 million hectares of arable land, of which only 84% is under cultivation despite the country's favorable growing conditions.

What is the biggest problem in Mozambique? ›

The human rights situation in Mozambique worsened in 2021, largely because of the ongoing violence in the northern Cabo Delgado province. The humanitarian crisis in the province also deteriorated due to insecurity and violence, causing the displacement of over 800,000 people.

What is causing the food shortages in Mozambique? ›

The overwhelming majority of producers are subsistence farmers. Chronic food insecurity is exacerbated by climate shocks and natural disasters such as floods, droughts and cyclones. The country has vast potential to eventually become a major food producer in Southern Africa.

What is the cash crop in Mozambique? ›

The main cash crops are tobacco, cotton, sesame, sugar and tea. Tree crops, especially coconut and cashew, grown by small farmers, are an important source of foreign exchange earnings, and contribute to household food security. Wild Plums are also cultivated in Mozambique.

What is Mozambique known for economically? ›

Agriculture, fishing and forestry. In Mozambique, agriculture is the mainstay of the economy and the country has a great potential for growth in the sector. Agriculture employs more than 80 percent of the labour force and provides livelihoods to the vast majority of over 23 million inhabitants.

What is climate smart agriculture in Mozambique? ›

Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) offers a promising pathway to sustainable intensification of agriculture and increased farm productivity, income and resilience for smallholder farming families. CSA is not new to Mozambique, but uptake has been slow due to various demand- and supply-side challenges.

What does Mozambique lack? ›

One of Mozambique's greatest challenges continues to be a shortage of skills in its workforce, which is reflected in its rank of 185th out of 191 countries on the United Nation's 2021 Human Development Index. Maputo City, if it were a country, would place 141st.

Why is Mozambique in extreme poverty? ›

Over the last five years, there was an increase in poverty rates, especially in rural areas, due to a crisis generated by decreasing foreign direct investment (FDI), natural disasters, and military attacks in the north and centre of Mozambique.

What is the poorest region of Mozambique? ›

Poverty continues to be high in Zambezia, Nampula and Niassa, historically the provinces with the highest poverty levels. In contrast, Maputo Province and Maputo City show the largest decline even though they had the lowest poverty levels back in 2002/03.

Why is Mozambique so rich? ›

A key factor in Mozambique's economic growth was the opening of an aluminum smelter near Maputo in 2000. It is one of the world's largest smelters of aluminum, which has become an important export for Mozambique.

Can Americans own land in Mozambique? ›

All land in Mozambique is state-owned, so both local and foreigner buyers merely own the right to use the land, initially for a period of 50 years (renewed every 50 years). Property on the land itself does not fall under this lease basis however, and thus can be sold, transferred or rented.

What makes Mozambique rich? ›

Mozambique's rich biodiversity and natural resources have the potential to drive economic growth through increasing the tourism and extractive industries. Historically though the government has lacked the capacity and political will to effectively protect these resources from illegal activities and corruption.

What is a major problem in agriculture? ›

Increasingly volatile weather and more extreme events – like floods and droughts – change growing seasons, limit the availability of water, allow weeds, pests and fungi to thrive, and can reduce crop productivity.

What are 5 problems of agricultural development in West Africa? ›

– lack of knowledge of up-to-date technologies and practices, – low use of improved seed, – low use of fertilizer, – inadequate irrigation and. – lack of incentives for farmers in the absence of remunerative markets.

What are the agricultural problems in West Africa? ›

In West Africa, farming is characterized by rain-fed production, low fertilizer use, poor quality seeds, inadequate water management and low soil fertility.

How does climate change affect agriculture in Mozambique? ›

It is projected that climate change will increase agricultural climate risks due to more frequent and intense droughts, floods and cyclones. This will significantly impact food security and the livelihoods of the rural population.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Annamae Dooley

Last Updated:

Views: 5643

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Annamae Dooley

Birthday: 2001-07-26

Address: 9687 Tambra Meadow, Bradleyhaven, TN 53219

Phone: +9316045904039

Job: Future Coordinator

Hobby: Archery, Couponing, Poi, Kite flying, Knitting, Rappelling, Baseball

Introduction: My name is Annamae Dooley, I am a witty, quaint, lovely, clever, rich, sparkling, powerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.