We have had a superb wet season - at home I have recorded over 800 millimeters of rainfall - well above our average of about 600. In the north the season has been drier - they are running at about 75 per cent of normal, but the distribution of the rain has been so regular that many are saying that they have record yields on the little they were able to plant. A feature of this season is that the rivers have not flooded as in the past - roaring raging tides of brown water, sweeping away all in their path. Instead our rivers are generally clean and flowing normally.
The reason is that there are so few cattle - to raise cattle, you must have security and following the farm invasions, no one has security. There is simply no rule of law and all forms of livestock - especially the large mammals, are vulnerable to theft. So the veldt is green and lush, grass up to your shoulders almost everywhere. The winter fires are going to be terrible because there is so much grass and there are no firebreaks. Who builds firebreaks on land they do not own?
Even with the good rains I personally do not expect maize production to reach more than 500 000 tonnes - about 25 per cent of what we need. We already know that tobacco production is not going to exceed 35 000 tonnes - about 15 per cent of what we grew in the past and even this is under threat from the current wave of farm invasions.
The world is weary of our problems over land, I do not blame them, but that does not in any way diminish the seriousness of what has and is happening to our farmers. In the year 2000, our farming industry consisted of about 700 000 small scale farmers on nearly 20 million hectares. They grew 60 per cent of our maize needs and about 85 per cent of the cotton plus a fair amount of beans, groundnuts and sorghum. They supported a population of about 3,5 million people.
That same year we had about 5 500 large-scale commercial farmers, occupying about 8 million hectares of land, employing 350 000 workers and providing support for about 2 million people. These farmers were among the most productive in the world. They supplied global markets with flue cured tobacco - taking third place behind the United States and Brazil, they produced 600 000 tonnes of sugar, half of it for export, 1 million tonnes of maize, some of which was exported. In addition they sold over 400 000 head of cattle annually, made the country self sufficient in milk, pig meat, poultry and fruit of all kinds and supplied 8 per cent of Europe's imports of horticultural produce.
In doing so, they generated half all export revenues and 60 per cent of industrial activity and they did this without subsidy from the State. Some 25 per cent of these farmers were black and most farms employed black managers. Their owners had purchased 83 per cent of all these farms after independence in 1980 having first obtained certificates of 'No Interest' from the State indicating that the land was not required for land reform.