Monday, November 2, 2015


 

VIOLET MENGO

Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

ZAMBIA climate change and development ambassador Abel Musumali has called on African countries to consider restoring and rehabilitating dambo areas for increased vegetable production.

 Mr Musumali said dambo areas on the continent are under threat both by climate change and human induced activities such as cutting trees, unsustainable agricultural practices and uncontrolled abstraction of water for agriculture and household activities.

 He was speaking at the Africa Youth Conference on Climate Change that took place on Tuesday ahead of the main conference.

 This was during a plenary on African Youth responses to climate change and food security, action from frontlines: opportunities and challenges.

 He said the main purpose of restoring the dambos is to increase production for tomato and cabbage growing which will in turn improve food security and household income.

 "In Zambia, farmers especially women and youths are being trained on how to manage the dambos from further degradation in Chibombo district," Mr Musumali said.

 He said one of the mechanisms to rehabilitate and restore the dambos is through the use of organic manure, tree planting and provision of irrigation pumps for controlled water abstraction.

 Mr Musumali said Zambia is also exploring the public private partnership (PPP) initiative and joint ventures of farmers and private companies in the protection of dambos and growing of good agricultural products.

 He said they are also being trained on value addition and having access to the market.

 He encouraged delegates to venture into the restoration of sensitive ecosystems such as dambos, swamps and streams that are guided by research in order to make an informed decision at community and national level.

 Close to 500 delegates comprising African negotiators on climate change, experts and  researchers  have gathered here for a three-day climate change deliberations that will culminate in the continent coming up with a common voice to the UN climate change summit taking place in Paris this December.

 Ends

CCDA5 opens in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

October 28, 2015
VIOLET MENGO
Victoria Fall, Zimbabwe
 
THE fifth African climate change and development conference opened yesterday with a call for the continent to demand a fair, just and binding treaty at the conference of parties (COP) taking place in Paris this December.
 
Economic Commission for Africa Director in charge of special initiative division Fatima Denton said Africa should demand a treaty abetted by a means of implementation that will align Africa’s commitment to development priorities.
 
Dr Denton said the priorities for Africa includes among others the Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDCs) that will support ambitions towards energy efficiency, agricultural transformation and demand financial commitments.
 
“In Paris, we demand that the sacred principle of common but differentiated responsibility be given a central place, but whilst we revive this principle, we must also use it to remind ourselves that the job is not done until we take our rightful place in our effort to curb emissions, irrespective of our levels of culpability,” Dr Denton said.
 
She said the meeting is about Africa’s collective security for today and tomorrow.
 
“The urgent agenda now, is to figure out how fast we can run to repair and respond to the critical cascading challenges ranging from alarming rate of degradation of water resources, soils, food systems, land, trees and forests that we rely on to sustain ourselves,” she said.
 
Dr Denton said Africa is keen to be a strong participant and contributor to a successful outcome in Paris.
 
The conference is being held under the theme dubbed: Africa, climate change and sustainable development: What is at stake at Paris and beyond.
Africa Development Bank representative Mary Monyau said the Bank has stepped up its support for African countries to build resilient to the impact of climate change.
 
“Between 2011 and 2014, the bank spent nearly US$7 billion towards climate finance in Africa,” she said.
 
Ms Monyau said the bank will step up climate finance by 40 percent to US$5 billion per year by 2020.
 
She said the investment will be delivered within the framework of five priority areas that build on the bank strategy for 2013 to 2022.
 
And Zimbabwe Vice president who officially opened the conference said Zambia and Zimbabwe are grappling with power deficit due to low water levels necessitated by low water levels in the water bodies.
 
He appealed to delegates to represent Africa effectively at COP21.
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VIOLET MENGO
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe
 
ZAMBIA’s ambassador to Zimbabwe Ng’ona Mwelwa Chibesakunda says crop diversification which government has embarked on remains key to Zambia’s food security amid climate change challenges.
 
Mr Chibesakunda said in an interview here that with diversification, it is unlikely for the country to experience food insecurity as there will be abundance of different crops to sustain people.
 
He said Zambia has been fortunate in the region to receive enough rainfall in some parts of the country that has helped the country to stock enough maize and export some.
 
“For Zimbabwe as you are aware for two years now, the country has had very little rainfall as a result very little maize has been grown, but Zambia has been luck that one part of the country had enough rain and produced a lot of maize which we are now exporting to some countries like Zimbabwe,” Mr Chibesakunda said.
 
The ambassador said conference like the climate change taking place here are very important for Africa because they help to address critical challenges such the shortage of rainfall in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania, Mozambique and Botswana.
 
He said it is from such gathering that solutions to difficulties countries are facing are found as ideas are floated by delegates that offer solution and hope.
 
“In some parts of Zambia where we do not have enough rainfall, conferences like this will help by coming up with ideas of what type of crops to grow. It gives us time to reflect on whether to continue growing maize which requires a lot of rainfall or switch to other types of crops,” he said.
 
Mr Chibesakunda said with diversification, the nutrition status of the people is improved and enhanced.
 
He said nutrition is mainly concerned with what type of food to grow. “If for example we depend on maize, surely we can also grow other crops that are drought resistant like sorghum and millet.”
He said crops like cassava and millet do not need long period of rain can also be encouraged to enhance people’s nutrition.
 
Mr Chibesakunda said he is impressed with the attendance of Zambian experts at the conference because it the experts that advises government on most critical pertaining to the development of the country.
 
And the ambassador said Zambians living in Zimbabwe are happy with government coming up with the diaspora policy.
Zambia's ambassador to Zimbabwe, third from right with the Zambian delegation members at the climate  change and development conference that took place from 28th to 31 October 2015
 
 
He said many Zambians have expressed interest in returning to Zambia to help develop the country following government’s call to Zambian living in diaspora to take part in the development.
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Friday, April 17, 2015

COMESA aiding climate smart agriculture

lilian farming
Climate change has affected almost everyone
VIOLET MENGO – Lusaka
LILLIAN Malambo, 36, is an HIV- positive woman in Zambia’s Southern Province. She tested positive to the virus that causes AIDS during her last pregnancy in 2010.
Ms Malambo’s HIV positive status meant that she had to make changes to her lifestyle and this included improving her nutrition. But she could not manage to do so due to lack of funds. She as such ventured into agriculture with the intention of growing enough crops for consumption and the surplus for sale.
“I did venture into farming but my yields were usually low. Nature was mostly to blame. Most times, the rains were erratic and sometimes we experienced drought. And this had an impact on my health as well as providing for my family’s dietary needs,” Ms Malambo said.
Fortunately for her, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), through the Golden Valley Agricultural Trust (GART), has a programme specifically targeted at farmers like Ms Malambo. The programme trains farmers in climate smart agriculture.
Climate smart agriculture, according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation, is the integration of three dimensions of sustainable development.
These are: sustainably increasing agricultural productivity and incomes, adapting and building resilience to climate change as well as reducing or removing greenhouse gas emissions.
It is an approach to developing the technical, policy and investment conditions aimed at achieving sustainable agricultural development for enhanced food security.
“I was privileged to be part of the team of farmers that received training from GART in 2013 in Monze on climate smart agriculture. The training changed my life and how I do my farming now,” Ms Malambo said.
She said the training was the turning point in her life and that of the family in terms of food security and provision of school requirements for her children.
Climate smart agriculture, Ms Malambo said, does not affect the environment because it is dependent on digging the basins once the land is cleared.
“There is no burning of residue, all we do is slash, prepare the basin and plant while ensuring soil fertility,” she said.
Today, Ms Malambo produces maize for consumption and sale. She also rears chickens. This has helped enhance her family’s nutritional status.
“With the support of GART, today I can support my children in school and also ensure that they have nutritious food,” she said.
Her aim is to buy cows and venture into other income- generating activities.
“I am so happy that the [COMESA] programme has empowered and also given me reason to still continue living,” she said.
Ms Malambo is one of the many people who have benefited from climate smart agriculture, the programme that has been helping vulnerable communities in Zambia engage in productive agricultural ventures.
With the support of COMESA, rural communities are slowly fighting poverty in their households and becoming food secure.
Climate change has affected almost everyone and has had a huge negative impact on farming communities in Africa in general and East and Southern Africa in particular where over 80 percent of people depend on rain-fed agriculture for their livelihood.
These climate change challenges have adversely impacted on many rural communities, especially children and women like Ms Malambo.
It is against this backgro   und that COMESA embarked on the implementation of the climate change adaptation initiative and identified climate smart agriculture as one of the major areas of focus in addressing the effects of climate change.
COMESA Secretary General Sindiso Ngwenya says due to global warming caused by the depletion of the ozone layer, the world is experiencing dramatic weather changes resulting in unexpected floods and drought.
“As a result of the climatic changes being experienced, climate smart agriculture has been proved to be one of the best ways of withstanding the changes,” Mr Ngwenya said.
He said when farmers practise climate smart agriculture, the yield is four to five times more than the produce from traditional farming practices.
The innovation, which is being supported by the Norwegian government, European Union and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID), has in the past few years implemented aggressive adaptation and mitigation programmes in many countries in East and Southern Africa.
To ensure that adaptation programmes benefits reach the most vulnerable at the local level, COMESA has gone into partnerships with relevant government ministries, regional, local NGOs and international organisations.
In Zambia, Namibia, Lesotho and Botswana, COMESA works with organisations with facilities on the ground such as GART to promote climate smart agriculture.
GART director Steven Muliokela says climate change scenarios are real as has been seen in the changes in frequency, onset of the rain and its quantity.
He says GART is working in four countries that are implementing climate change adaptation and mitigation programmes.
“We need to find a way of managing climatic changes because despite these changes, people’s livelihoods have not changed. Adaptation is an immediate activity allowing people to cope with the changes as a result of climate change,” Dr Mulyokela says.
Under the GART programme, COMESA has offered support to rural communities such as those in Monze where Ms Malambo lives.
The support to communities in the COMESA region is helping eradicate extreme poverty and hunger in line with the Millennium Development Goals.
If nothing is done to mitigate the effects of climate change, famine and disease can be at their worst.
And this is the reason why COMESA has realised the need to have climate smart agriculture practices imparted in rural communities which are the most vulnerable.