ZTE

ZTE

ZTE Mobile Phones

Open
HomeAgriculture

Govt Owes Seed Companies US$62 Million

1 year agoTue, 26 Dec 2023 06:29:28 GMT
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Govt Owes Seed Companies US$62 Million

The Government owes seed companies more than US$60 million, the Zimbabwe Seed Association (ZSA), a grouping of seed companies, has said.

ZSA said that its members are owed almost half of the payments for seed supplied to the Government last season, while “nearly all” of the seed supplied this year has not been paid for.

A ZSA memo, dated 18 December 2023, seen by newZWire reads in part:

As an illustration, a total of US$61,778,000 is owed to eleven members of the association (Arda, Easiseeds, Farmbiz Genetics, Intaba trading, Klein Karoo Seed Marketing, Prime Seeds/Seed Co vegetables, Quton, Reapers, Seed Co, Tocek, Zimbabwe Technology Solutions).

The Government is the biggest buyer of seed, which it distributes to hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers across the country under programmes such as Pfumvudza/Intwasa.

Click here: Pindula WhatsApp Channel
wa.me/channel/0029Vb4GVea90x2nCSDImS1b

 

But with no payment from their biggest customer, seed companies are defaulting on bank loans, laying off staff, and planning to scale back on production.

As a result, experienced growers are refusing to sign new contracts with seed companies because they have not been paid for 2023 deliveries. Said ZSA said:

Relationships with banks are now at their lowest level; seed companies cannot be trusted and hence are failing to access favourable credit facilities including the productive sector facility.

Seed producers are unable to secure the foreign currency they need for imports such as hybrid seed of sunflower and sorghums and parental seed, which they say helps localised certified seed production.

ZSA said that a request to the government for US$15.5 million from six seed producers “so far got no response”. It added:

Such financial distress is unsustainable and results in the scaling down of operations, and closing of seed companies and Zimbabwe will soon lose its status of a well-developed seed sector which has over the years ensured national seed security.

The hectarage put under maize in the current 2023/24 season is far less than last season due to the El Nino-induced drought.

According to Government data, by 10 December, farmers had planted just 95 156 hectares of crops, a steep fall from 465 707 hectares on the same day last year.

Meanwhile, Seed Co, the country’s largest producer and the main supplier of government seed, has reported a 22% drop in maize seed sales in the half-year to September.

Zimbabwe experienced a prolonged drought from late October into early December and this is expected to negatively impact farm output as the majority of farmers are into rain-fed agriculture.

More: Pindula News

Tags

5 Comments

Ini Zvangu · 1 year ago
Saka Zanu was campaigning with stoled seed and fertiliser. Hanzi hee Presidential Inputs, zvipi its Presidential Loot.
Ndin · 1 year ago
Government priorities are drunk paying Tshabangu lawyers millions of dollars and by elections at the expense of citizens
Tyrany · 1 year ago
The sekondi repubhuriki
chinondidya chii · 1 year ago
it's the seed mafia who the beneficiary of these sham programmes like Pfumvudza
XXX · 1 year ago
It does not auger well to hear that Government owes various amounts of money to seed companies. What is painful is that they use the seeds for campaigning purposes through Pfumvudza. ZANU PF must pay this money which they now want citizens to believe that the money was borrowed by Government yet it is ZANU PF which gets the money for campaigning purposes. EHE ICHO !!!!!

Leave a Comment


Generate a Whatsapp Message

Buy Phones on Credit.

More Deals
Feedback