CAPE TOWN, South Africa, February 3, 2021/ -- By Grace Goodrich
With
fertile river valleys, expansive coastal lowlands and the prolific
Zambezi River as a source of
irrigation, Mozambique is considered a
mecca for crop cultivation, with climatic conditions catering to a
diverse range of agricultural products.
Agriculture represents
the second-largest sector of the Mozambican economy – accounting for
more than 25% of GDP and employing 80% of the labor force – and is
supported by staple crops including maize, cassava, rice, nuts, cotton,
coffee, sugar and tobacco. Maize and cassava, for example, are grown by
80% of all Mozambican small-scale farmers and make up more than
one-third of cultivated land. Yet the sector remains confined to
subsistence farming largely due to a lack of investment, which impedes
the development of critical infrastructure required to extend farming
practices outside of the individual household.
In fact,
smallholder farmers in Mozambique account for 95% of agricultural
production, while roughly 400 commercial farmers – primarily producing
sugar, soybeans, bananas, rice, vegetables, nuts, cotton and tobacco –
account for the remaining five percent. With only 16% of land suitable
for farming currently being cultivated – combined with a 1,500-mile
coastline that enables export to Middle Eastern and Asian markets via
ocean ports – Mozambique boasts considerable potential for large-scale,
industrialized farming both in-country and for regional export.
From Net Importer to Net ExporterA
key constraint to the development of commercial agriculture in
Mozambique is limited infrastructure: insufficient roads, railway and
ports, antiquated farming practices and high vulnerability to drought,
floods and cyclones, leaving the sector susceptible to external shocks.
While
discovery of Mozambican gas has accelerated energy infrastructure
growth since commercial reserves were discovered in 2011, domestic
transport and logistics sectors remain underdeveloped, leading to longer
lead times and higher costs associated with storage and warehousing.
Moreover, limited electricity access and high fuel prices – given that
the country relies on imported refined petroleum derivatives – can
increase product costs by 10-20% per kilogram. To render small-scale
farmers more resilient to climate change and improve farming techniques,
resource-smart technologies such as drip systems, pumps, ultraviolet
plastic filtration and post-harvest storage have been implemented and
met with intermediate success, yet sustained knowledge and technology
transfer remains needed.
Despite its considerable export
potential to the wider region, Mozambique carries a significant trade
deficit, importing capital-intensive goods such as farming and transport
equipment, along with processed produce, meat and livestock from its
Southern African Development Community neighbors. As a result,
integrated value chains that facilitate the manufacturing of cash crops –
cashews, tobacco and sugar – stand to generate in-country value by
refining raw agricultural goods into consumable products and
establishing domestic and regional consumer markets in the process.
Improved access to financial services and credit – in which smallholder
farmers and small- and medium-sized enterprises can grow their
businesses and access critical capital for improved farming technologies
– would also serve to alleviate rural poverty and drive financial
inclusion.
Natural Gas to Drive Expansion Ongoing
gas monetization initiatives in Mozambique have a direct impact on the
scale and expansion of industrial agriculture in the country, in
addition to the potential that gas-to-power offers to power irrigation
pumps, dry crops, heat greenhouses and so forth.
Under the
administration of President Filipe Nyusi, natural gas has been
positioned not as an end within itself, but rather as a means of
generating long-term economic diversification, skills development and
job creation across energy, agriculture, agro-processing, manufacturing
and construction sectors. President Nyusi’s focus on agro-industry and
agro-chemistry seeks to achieve “zero hunger” in the country through the
cultivation of self-sufficient farming and improved access to
infrastructure.
More specifically, natural gas offers the ability
to reduce costs of food production (and importation) and establish
large-scale industrial farming through the development of locally
manufactured chemical fertilizers. Natural gas – of which Mozambique
holds 100 trillion cubic feet of recoverable reserves – plays an
integral role in fertilizer production, as it is used as a primary raw
material for the production of liquid ammonia and resulting carbon
dioxide gas, which is then combined to create urea fertilizer.
Fertilization
not only improves crop yields, but also boosts agricultural
profitability and nutrient density. With enhanced crop efficiency and
the early seeds of a downstream and manufacturing industry, Mozambique
could serve as a regional – and even international – player in food
production and security, a transition facilitated by the African
Continental Free Trade Area that widens the reach of domestic
agriculture and industry. For import-dependent African countries like
Mozambique, food and energy security have risen to the forefront of the
national agenda in the wake of COVID-19 and disruptions to regional and
global supply chains.
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