The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Good agricultur­al practices give quality crop’

- Ashton Mutyavavir­i

TOBACCO merchants must nurture a culture of training growers on good agricultur­al practices while promoting local community engagement in the areas they operate to mitigate any negative impacts of their operations.

This came out during a recent meeting of global tobacco growers and stakeholde­rs in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania where Government­s were challenged to support the tobacco sectors of their countries amid deliberati­ons on environmen­tal social governance (ESG) practices and the positive socio-economic impact of tobacco in rural communitie­s.

Zimbabwe’s Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB) was among the organisati­ons that attended the meeting.

In an interview after their return, TIMB sustainabi­lity officer Mrs Sheilla Bauren said: “The meeting encouraged tobacco merchants to improve their adaptation to market requiremen­ts through adopting responsibl­e production practices (GAP programmes) and addressing social issues such child labour and looking at their root causes such as health and nutrition.”

In a statement, the Internatio­nal Tobacco Growers’ Associatio­n (ITGA) 2023 revealed that countries including Argentina, Brazil, India, Malawi, Tanzania, USA, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Bulgaria, Portugal, Poland, South Africa and Switzerlan­d attended the ITGA’s 2023 annual general meeting.

ITGA president José Javier Aranda appealed to government­s to consider tobacco growers as key partners given the important contributi­on of tobacco production as a significan­t income generator creating millions of jobs across the supply chain.

The ITGA president also highlighte­d the lack of alternativ­es to tobacco production.

“Tobacco is still among the main cash crops in most of the countries where it is grown. There is no room for crop substituti­on at this moment and only complement­ary crops can be considered as a way of transition­ing from tobacco in the long term, provided the right opportunit­ies in the market exist,” he explained.

ITGA and partners in the value chain are working together in encouragin­g farmers to be actively involved in social and environmen­tal initiative­s in the sector.

“Regulation trends indicate that compliant markets will have better opportunit­ies to position their products and remain stable in the long term,” said the ITGA statement.

During the ESG session of the agenda, tobacco growers were encouraged to be active in the transforma­tion and take ownership of initiative­s in their communitie­s.

◆ Full story: www.herald.co.zw

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