maize farm |
Zimbabwe will, by
next week, sign a 100 000 tonnes maize importation deal with Mexico
following successful negotiations with the central American country's
agriculture minister held in South Africa last Saturday.This year,
Zimbabwe is the biggest buyer of Mexican maize, having already imported
about 517 000 tonnes from the central American country since the
beginning of the year.
In total, Government and the private sector have since January imported 632 000 tonnes of grain from around the world.
The deal was
negotiated between the Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe, the
representative body of the country's millers and Mexican Minister of
Trade for Europe and Africa Carlos Sanchez Pavoz and his high level
delegation of grain producers and exporters.
The GMAZ delegation was led by chairman Tafadzwa Musarara.
"GMAZ will sign up
for 100 000 metric tonnes of white maize to be supplied by Terra Wealth
to supplement its grain reserves," said Mr Musarara, who is in strong
position to take up the vacant Grain Marketing Board post of chief
executive officer.
"We are finalising
on the payment instrument and hope to complete that in the next seven
days. We are speeding on the signing of the agreement because we are
competing with Venezuela for the Mexican maize," he said.
Further to that, a GMAZ delegation is set to visit Mexico before the end of the year to meet other prospective maize suppliers.
Mr Musarara said
two Mexican maize producers and exporters, Terra Wealth and Megacante,
are keen to participate in maize contract farming in Zimbabwe.
In that regard, the
Mexicans are due to visit Zimbabwe in January next year to tie-up the
loose ends in the contract farming deal and also explore other
investment avenues within the agricultural sector.
Currently, Zimbabwe
has enough grain to take the country to the end of February and the
additional 100 000 tonnes is expected to push the country through to
August next year.
GMAZ said last
month that the grain situation in Zimbabwe will remain stable in the
short to medium-term to see the country through to the next season owing
to Government's strategic grain management and the private sector's
importation programmes.
The experts said
the country has enough stock to cover for the drought currently ravaging
the southern African region, cited as the worst in 40 years.
Currently, Zimbabwe is sitting on 320 000 tonnes of maize in Strategic Grain Reserves and 65 000 tonnes of wheat. The private sector has close to 200 000 tonnes.
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