The AfDB said one of the goals of the project is to “increase the efficiency of water resources used for wheat production by rehabilitating and lining irrigation canals to reduce wastewater losses.” It also includes the initial development of on-farm irrigation in the Old Valley and Delta regions within three years.

In southern Africa, where drought has ravaged some of the top wheat producing countries, Zimbabwe is banking on modern irrigation technology to improve its wheat production despite reported shortages of water for irrigation.

As the Russia-Ukraine conflict drags on, Zimbabwe has expanded its wheat acreage from 80,883 hectares in 2022 to 90,000 hectares this year, with the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe saying wheat output may have surpassed 400,000 tonnes in 2023, up from 375,131 tonnes in 2022.

In its drive to achieve self-sufficiency in wheat, Zimbabwe has embraced a new bread wheat variety called SAVE, developed by the International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA).

“SAVE thrives under harsh conditions due to its resistance to heat, drought and yellow and leaf rust with a potential yield of up to seven tonnes per hectare,” ICARDA said.

The wheat variety was released in 2022 and Zimbabwe began planting it in 2023 with ICARDA noting that the country’s wheat output for the year increased to 468,000 tonnes from the 90,186 hectares under cultivation. As a result, the national self-sufficiency goal was exceeded by 30%.

Other wheat producers such as Ethiopia and Sudan also have expanded their irrigated wheat acreage, increased use of modern irrigation technology and adopted climate change-resilient wheat varieties.

But as AGRA warned, the war in Ukraine has exacerbated the growing dependence of “African countries on Russia and Ukraine, particularly for their agricultural needs, (and it) has greatly contributed to worsening the tensions and difficulties that already existed on the food front.”

In fact, the organization said the trade uncertainty along the Black Sea could “usher back in the era of high food prices, given that 44% of the wheat consumed on the continent comes from Russia and Ukraine.”

For Africa to meet its wheat consumption needs for its more than 1 billion people, there is urgent need to increase investment in climate mitigation measures, wheat farm mechanization, sustainable use of agricultural farm inputs, research, development and adoption of high yielding wheat varieties.