Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe

Zimbabweʼs water reforms that were undertaken in the 1990s were meant to redress the colonially inherited inequalities to agricultural water, increase water security against frequent droughts, improve water management, and realise sustainable financing of the water sector. They were underpinned by t...

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Main Authors: Takunda Hove, Bill Derman, Emmanuel Manzungu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2016-10-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/329-a9-3-10/file
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spelling doaj-baa215fd827d4dcaa6363642a657bf972020-11-25T00:19:01ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752016-10-0193531548Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe Takunda HoveBill Derman Emmanuel Manzungu Zimbabweʼs water reforms that were undertaken in the 1990s were meant to redress the colonially inherited inequalities to agricultural water, increase water security against frequent droughts, improve water management, and realise sustainable financing of the water sector. They were underpinned by the 1998 Water and Zimbabwe National Water Authority Acts, which were based on Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) principles. This article describes how IWRM has been implemented against a backdrop of an ever-evolving land reform programme and a struggling agriculture sector. We examine how water is accessed and used in and around three water sources in the Middle Manyame Sub-Catchment, one of the seven sub-catchments of the Manyame Catchment. The Sub-Catchment is of particular significance because there was significant agricultural production on white-owned large-scale farmers, which have now been extensively allocated to small black farmers. The study demonstrated that while the land reform has, in theory, broadened access to water, irrigation water usage has remained low because of a depressed agriculture sector, shortage and high costs of electricity, and lack of capital needed to restore damaged or stolen irrigation equipment. The findings indicate that the assumption of a self-financing water sector, based on a well-functioning agriculture sector, which is the largest water user, has not been realised, and this has negatively affected implementation of IWRM in the Middle Manyame area and in Zimbabwe in general. http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/329-a9-3-10/fileWater reformland reformagricultureIWRMZimbabwe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takunda Hove
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
spellingShingle Takunda Hove
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
Water Alternatives
Water reform
land reform
agriculture
IWRM
Zimbabwe
author_facet Takunda Hove
Bill Derman
Emmanuel Manzungu
author_sort Takunda Hove
title Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
title_short Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
title_full Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Land, farming and IWRM: A case study of the middle Manyame Sub-catchment, Zimbabwe
title_sort land, farming and iwrm: a case study of the middle manyame sub-catchment, zimbabwe
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Zimbabweʼs water reforms that were undertaken in the 1990s were meant to redress the colonially inherited inequalities to agricultural water, increase water security against frequent droughts, improve water management, and realise sustainable financing of the water sector. They were underpinned by the 1998 Water and Zimbabwe National Water Authority Acts, which were based on Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) principles. This article describes how IWRM has been implemented against a backdrop of an ever-evolving land reform programme and a struggling agriculture sector. We examine how water is accessed and used in and around three water sources in the Middle Manyame Sub-Catchment, one of the seven sub-catchments of the Manyame Catchment. The Sub-Catchment is of particular significance because there was significant agricultural production on white-owned large-scale farmers, which have now been extensively allocated to small black farmers. The study demonstrated that while the land reform has, in theory, broadened access to water, irrigation water usage has remained low because of a depressed agriculture sector, shortage and high costs of electricity, and lack of capital needed to restore damaged or stolen irrigation equipment. The findings indicate that the assumption of a self-financing water sector, based on a well-functioning agriculture sector, which is the largest water user, has not been realised, and this has negatively affected implementation of IWRM in the Middle Manyame area and in Zimbabwe in general.
topic Water reform
land reform
agriculture
IWRM
Zimbabwe
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol9/v9issue3/329-a9-3-10/file
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