Where the cane lives
All of Zimbabwe's sugarcane is grown in the Lowveld, specifically in the Chiredzi District of Masvingo Province in the south-eastern part of the country. The region offers ideal sugar cane growing conditions: warm climate free from frost, excellent topography, fertile soils, and abundant sunshine.
A region built for cane
The Lowveld refers to areas at elevations of 150 to 600 metres above sea level. Long sunshine hours, warm year-round temperatures, and a near absence of frost combine to create a near-ideal environment for tropical grasses like sugarcane.
Climate and conditions
Sugarcane needs warm weather, well-drained fertile soil, and around 1,500 millimetres of water per year (rainfall plus irrigation). The Lowveld's natural rainfall is supplemented by an extensive irrigation infrastructure that is one of the region's greatest assets.
Water infrastructure
The Tokwe-Mukorsi Dam (the largest inland dam in Zimbabwe) and other water storage and conveyance systems provide the irrigation water essential for sugarcane production. An electricity swap agreement exists between the sugar mills and the Zimbabwe Power Company: mills supply electricity to the national grid during peak production (from bagasse cogeneration) and draw from the grid during off-peak periods.
Where the cane is grown
Estate-owned plantations form the backbone, with private outgrowers contributing significant volumes.
Hippo Valley
approximately 12,000 hectares of estate-owned plantations
Triangle
approximately 14,000 hectares of estate-owned plantations
Mkwasine
approximately 8,200 hectares farmed by small-scale farmers
Chapiwa
resettlement scheme with around 10 hectares per farmer
Mpapa
17 farmers with around 35 hectares each
approximately 44,500 ha
total area, with potential to produce over 3 million tonnes of cane annually at average yields of 100 t/ha
Twelve to eighteen months
Sugarcane takes 12 to 18 months to reach maturity depending on the variety and conditions. Sugar content peaks at harvest time. The milling season runs during the cooler, drier months when sucrose content in the cane is highest. Cane can be harvested mechanically or by hand.
Private farmer programmes
The SusCo (Successful Rural Sugarcane Farming Community) project aims to rehabilitate and expand private farmer cane production from approximately 11,200 hectares to 15,880 hectares. Project Kilimanjaro, launched in 2019, is developing 4,000 hectares of virgin land for 200 indigenous farmers with technical support from Tongaat Hulett.
Research
The Zimbabwe Sugar Association Experiment Station (ZSAES) conducts ongoing research into cane varieties, pest management, soil health, irrigation efficiency, and agronomic best practices for the Lowveld environment. ZSAES has served the industry for over 50 years.
Once the cane reaches the mill, the next chapter begins. See how sugar is made, meet the companies behind these estates, or read about the environmental side of cane growing on sugar and the environment.