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Business & Economy

SADC’s Fertiliser Reform Agenda

Martin Ogumah
Last updated: June 2, 2026 8:50 am
Martin Ogumah
June 2, 2026
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9 Min Read
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Why Southern Africa’s Food Security Future Depends on Regional Agricultural Integration

Food security has emerged as one of the most pressing economic and strategic challenges facing Southern Africa. As governments across the region grapple with rising food costs, climate shocks, supply chain disruptions, and agricultural productivity constraints, calls are growing for deeper regional cooperation to protect livelihoods and strengthen economic resilience.

This reality was brought into sharp focus at the recent Southern African Development Community (SADC) ministerial meeting in Victoria Falls, where South Africa’s Minister of Agriculture, John Steenhuisen, urged member states to accelerate agricultural reforms and harmonise fertiliser regulations to improve food production and reduce vulnerability to future crises.

His intervention reflects a growing recognition that food security is no longer simply an agricultural issue. It has become a matter of economic stability, regional competitiveness, social cohesion, and national security.

The Persistent Paradox of Food Insecurity in a Resource-Rich Region

Despite recent improvements in cereal production following previous drought conditions, food insecurity remains deeply entrenched across Southern Africa.

According to regional estimates, approximately 58 million people across SADC member states continue to experience acute food insecurity, largely due to affordability constraints and limited access to food supplies.

This paradox is particularly striking given the region’s vast agricultural potential. Southern Africa possesses extensive arable land, abundant natural resources, and favourable climatic zones capable of supporting large scale food production.

Yet millions remain vulnerable to hunger and malnutrition.

The challenge is not simply one of production. It is increasingly a question of productivity, distribution, affordability, infrastructure, and policy coordination.

Why Fertiliser Reform Has Become an Economic Imperative

At the heart of the discussion lies the issue of fertiliser access.

Fertiliser remains one of the most important inputs for improving agricultural productivity, yet farmers across Southern Africa continue to face high costs, inconsistent supply, and regulatory barriers that limit availability.

According to Steenhuisen, fragmented regulatory systems across SADC countries have created unnecessary inefficiencies. Different registration requirements, varying quality standards, and bureaucratic approval processes increase costs for manufacturers and distributors, which are ultimately passed on to farmers.

The proposed harmonisation of fertiliser regulations seeks to address these obstacles by creating a more integrated regional market.

The implications extend far beyond agriculture. A harmonised fertiliser market could reduce production costs, stimulate private sector investment, encourage local manufacturing, improve supply chain efficiency, and increase crop yields across the region.

In economic terms, fertiliser reform is not merely an agricultural policy. It is an industrial policy, a trade policy, and a food security policy rolled into one.

Agriculture, Inflation, and Economic Stability

The urgency of agricultural reform is heightened by the inflationary pressures affecting many African economies. Food inflation remains one of the most politically sensitive and economically destabilising forms of inflation because it directly affects household welfare, particularly among low-income populations.

When agricultural productivity declines, food prices rise. Rising food prices reduce purchasing power, increase poverty levels, and place additional pressure on governments to intervene through subsidies or emergency relief programmes. Improving access to fertiliser and increasing farm productivity can therefore play a crucial role in stabilising food prices and supporting broader macroeconomic stability. For policymakers, agricultural productivity is increasingly becoming a key anti-inflation strategy.

Animal Disease Outbreaks Reveal the Limits of National Responses

Another major concern raised during the meeting was the spread of Foot and Mouth Disease across the region. With outbreaks reported in 11 SADC member states, the issue highlights the growing interconnectedness of regional agricultural systems.

Animal diseases do not recognise political boundaries. A disease outbreak in one country can rapidly affect livestock markets, food supplies, export earnings, and rural livelihoods across multiple countries.

This reality exposes a fundamental weakness in fragmented national responses. The call for a regional disease control framework reflects an emerging understanding that effective agricultural governance increasingly requires cross border coordination, information sharing, surveillance systems, and joint intervention mechanisms.

In a globalised economy, agricultural security has become inseparable from regional cooperation.

Climate Change Is Rewriting Africa’s Agricultural Equation

Underlying many of the region’s food security challenges is the growing impact of climate change. Southern Africa has experienced recurring droughts, erratic rainfall patterns, flooding events, and extreme weather conditions that continue to disrupt agricultural production. Climate volatility is transforming agriculture from a predictable economic activity into a high-risk sector requiring greater resilience and innovation.

This means future agricultural strategies must move beyond traditional production models toward climate smart agriculture, improved irrigation systems, drought resistant crops, digital farming technologies, and more sophisticated risk management frameworks.

The countries that adapt fastest to these realities will be better positioned to secure their food systems and maintain agricultural competitiveness.

What This Means for Africa’s Continental Development Agenda

The issues confronting SADC are not unique to Southern Africa. Across the continent, many countries face similar challenges involving food insecurity, agricultural underinvestment, fragmented markets, and climate vulnerability.

The discussions around fertiliser harmonisation align closely with the objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area, which seeks to reduce trade barriers and create more integrated African markets.

If successful, SADC’s reforms could serve as a model for broader continental agricultural integration. A more efficient regional agricultural market would strengthen food supply chains, reduce import dependence, stimulate agribusiness investment, and enhance Africa’s capacity to feed its rapidly growing population.

Global Implications: Food Security as a Geopolitical Issue

The significance of Southern Africa’s agricultural reforms extends beyond the continent. Global food systems have become increasingly vulnerable to geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions, trade restrictions, and climate events.

The Russia Ukraine conflict exposed how dependent many countries remain on imported fertilisers and agricultural inputs. At the same time, climate related disruptions continue to affect food production in multiple regions around the world.

Against this backdrop, efforts by SADC to strengthen regional agricultural resilience contribute not only to African food security but also to broader global food stability.

As global populations grow and demand for food increases, regions capable of improving agricultural productivity will become increasingly important players within the global economy.

From Agricultural Policy to Economic Strategy

The broader lesson from the Victoria Falls meeting is that agriculture can no longer be viewed solely as a rural development issue. Agriculture sits at the intersection of food security, inflation management, trade competitiveness, job creation, climate resilience, public health, and economic growth.

For SADC, accelerating fertiliser reform, strengthening disease surveillance, modernising agricultural systems, and deepening regional cooperation are no longer optional policy objectives. They are essential components of long-term economic strategy.

The region’s ability to transform agriculture may ultimately determine its ability to achieve sustainable growth and social stability in the decades ahead.

BrandiQ Takeaway

The future of Southern Africa’s economy may depend less on its mines and more on its farms. The call to harmonise fertiliser regulations is not merely a technical policy discussion; it is a strategic effort to build food sovereignty, control inflation, strengthen regional trade, and improve economic resilience. In an era defined by climate uncertainty and geopolitical disruptions, agricultural productivity is emerging as one of the most important determinants of national and regional competitiveness.

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ByMartin Ogumah
Martin Ogumah, is BrandiQ Head of Content Assets and Marketing. He is a graduate of sociology, with a master’s degree in political science, and over 15 years’ experience in content development, marketing and public relations.
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