Zimbabwe is accelerating the transformation of its agrifood systems by implementing a range of digital and climate-smart innovations aimed at strengthening food security, boosting productivity, and enhancing resilience to climate shocks. With coordinated support from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the country is advancing solar-powered irrigation systems, digital early-warning platforms, sustainable aquaculture technologies, and next-generation Digital Villages. These initiatives, highlighted at the 19th FAO Subregional Multi-Disciplinary Team Meeting for Southern Africa, position Zimbabwe as a regional leader in digital agriculture and climate-smart rural development.
The country’s agriculture sector faces recurring droughts, unpredictable rainfall, and pest outbreaks, creating an urgent need for data-driven planning and efficient resource management. FAO-supported solar-powered irrigation schemes are expanding water access for smallholder farmers while reducing energy costs. Complementary innovations, such as indigenous black soldier fly technologies for affordable aquaculture feed, improve food production and sustainability. Digital tools further enhance farmer decision-making, disease surveillance, and community-level resilience strategies, reflecting Zimbabwe’s vision of integrating climate-smart infrastructure with digital transformation to secure long-term food system resilience.
Through the EOSTAT project, FAO is helping Zimbabwe utilize Earth Observation and geospatial analytics for crop monitoring, field mapping, land-use assessment, and early-warning alerts. This real-time data enables rapid responses to drought, pests, and other climate pressures, supporting timely, science-based decision-making. At the same time, the organization is strengthening aquaculture value chains with black soldier fly technologies to produce organic protein-rich feed. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance systems across sentinel laboratories are also being digitalized, bolstering national capacity to monitor animal health and safeguard public health in line with One Health principles.
Digital innovation is expanding to the community level through the Digital Villages Initiative (DVI), which equips rural communities with mobile advisory tools, digital financial services, e-extension platforms, and technology-enabled market linkages. These hubs connect farmers to weather data, agricultural expertise, and commercial opportunities while fostering local entrepreneurship. Investments from the African Development Bank’s Seed Revolving Fund and resilient water-capture systems, such as sand abstraction, complement the digital tools, creating an integrated model where technology, climate adaptation, and local capacity converge to deliver sustainable food-system transformation.
FAO and the Government of Zimbabwe are continuing to scale digital capabilities and climate-smart solutions nationwide, prioritizing partnerships with private technology providers, investment in geospatial platforms, and skills development for farmers, extension staff, and youth innovators. As these digital ecosystems expand, Zimbabwe is establishing a foundation for smarter agriculture, more efficient market access, enhanced disease monitoring, and resilient livelihoods. By linking soil, water, aquaculture, and digital systems, the country is building a future where innovation drives both prosperity and food security for all.







