Planting crops before the clouds even show up is the ultimate flex for farmers who finally have their own land and a solid watering system.
Government links land tenure with productivity booster kits
Government links land tenure with productivity booster kits
- Rudo Mutsvairo and seventy-five other legends in Yomba are not stressing the weather anymore since they got their own title deeds and irrigation gear.
- The state is dropping thousands of physical title deeds for A2 and A1 farmers to end the era of being unsure if the land is actually theirs.
- Professor Obert Jiri says thirteen thousand A2 farmers are already in the queue to get their paperwork and turn their soil into a bankable asset.
- Because the land is now collateral, big banks like CBZ and AFC are opening up the vaults for long-term mortgages to buy tractors and pipes.
- The country has officially smashed past 235,000 hectares of functional irrigation, with a massive target of 350,000 hectares by next year.
- Farmers at Craigengower are drawing straight from Murodzi and Mwenje dams, which are looking healthy after some top-tier rainfall recently.
- Instead of waiting for a miracle from the sky, the squad is planting early so the crops are already strong by the time the real rains hit.
- This move from rain-dependent survival to modern water security is basically the backbone of the whole plan to feed the nation.
- Agriculture basically carried the team in 2025 by contributing thirty-three percent of the GDP growth, which is the biggest slice of the pie.
- Tobacco earnings hit a cool 1.2 billion dollars, while the wheat harvest was so huge it covered everything the country needs.
- Digital applications for land administration mean less traveling and lower costs for farmers who just want to get to work.
- Surpluses in maize and other cereals are looking so good that the food supply is basically locked in until the middle of 2026.