"); NewWindow.document.close(); return false; } // end hiding from old browsers -->

IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | NAMIBIA | NAMIBIA: Inputs could improve harvest prospects | Environment-Food Security-Natural Disasters | News Items
Tuesday 21 February 2006
 
Regions
Latest News
East Africa
Great Lakes
Horn of Africa
Southern Africa
·Angola
·Botswana
·Comoros
·Lesotho
·Madagascar
·Malawi
·Mauritius
·Mozambique
·Namibia
·Seychelles
·South Africa
·Southern Africa
·Swaziland
·Zambia
·Zimbabwe
West Africa
Weeklies
Themes
Children
Democracy & Governance
Early warning
Economy
Education
Environment
Food Security
Gender Issues
Health & Nutrition
HIV/AIDS
Human Rights
Natural Disasters
Peace & Security
Refugees/IDPs
IRIN Films
IRIN In-Depth

NAMIBIA: Inputs could improve harvest prospects


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  FAO

Last year's drought affected the harvest in northern Namibia

JOHANNESBURG, 16 Jan 2006 (IRIN) - Drought-prone northern Namibia, still battling with food shortages as a result of 2005's poor harvest, will receive agricultural inputs from the Red Cross this year.

In a bid to boost agricultural recovery, the Red Cross will provide 12,000 households in the northern Caprivi and Kavango regions with maize, millet seeds and fertiliser, said the organisation's national programme manager Abel Augustinio.

According to a recent food security and vulnerability assessment conducted jointly by the Namibia Vulnerability Assessment Committee and the Namibia Early Warning and Food Information Unit (NEWFIU) of the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Rural Development, most households in Caprivi and Kavango have used up their stocks of cereal.

"People, particularly in the two regions, have begun adopting extreme coping strategies, such as reducing the number and size of their meals," said Lesley Losper, an agricultural economist with NEWFIU.

The assessment said the cereal harvest had dropped by 76 percent in Caprivi and by 44 percent in Kavango at the end of 2005, compared to the previous year.

Namibia is facing a cereal shortfall of 90,000 mt in the national annual requirement of 305,400 mt. NEWFIU said the number of Namibians in need of food aid would only become clear after an early harvest forecast for 2006, to be conducted next month.

The joint study noted that prospects for the 2006 cereal crop remained uncertain. Rainfall performance records indicate drier than usual conditions compared to 2005, while a greater likelihood of normal to below-normal rainfall has been forecast for most parts of Namibia.

Namibia's Emergency Management Unit (EMU), which determines the numbers in need of food aid, said it was awaiting next month's forecast report, but added that up to 18,000 people in the two regions had needed aid last year.

However, the EMU warned that while rain in the drought-affected western Caprivi and Kavango has been beneficial, an incessant downpour in eastern Caprivi could result in floods. "The water in the Zambezi [river] is rising rapidly," said EMU Deputy Director Gabriel Kangowa. Flooding is a seasonal problem in the area.

[ENDS]


 Theme(s) Environment-Food Security-Natural Disasters
Other recent NAMIBIA reports:

Inheritance rights still a thorny issue,  14/Feb/06

Pushing for alternative power sources,  10/Feb/06

Call for education sector reforms,  2/Feb/06

Capital's townships stay dark for want of money,  30/Jan/06

Poor access to treatment hampers fight against TB,  25/Jan/06

Other recent Environment-Food Security-Natural Disasters reports:

MALAWI: Number of affected people rising as rain continues, 5/Jan/06

[Back] [Home Page]

Click here to send any feedback, comments or questions you have about IRIN's Website or if you prefer you can send an Email to Webmaster

Copyright © IRIN 2006
The material contained on www.IRINnews.org comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the IRIN copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.