
Harare — Zimbabwe’s youth empowerment agenda is increasingly moving beyond rhetoric into infrastructure-backed implementation, as a new solar-powered agricultural project spearheaded by Prevail International in partnership with the Zimbabwe National Water Authority and other stakeholders offers insight into a more structured model of youth inclusion.
At the centre of the initiative is a solar-powered borehole supporting a two-hectare horticultural garden, poultry production units, and fish ponds, a vertically integrated agribusiness system designed to address food security while generating employment. While similar projects have been introduced before, what distinguishes this development is its infrastructure-first approach and its deliberate positioning of youth not merely as beneficiaries, but as active economic participants.

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Book NowZimbabwe faces a demographic reality in which young people constitute the majority of the population. However, youth unemployment remains one of the country’s most pressing socio-economic challenges. Against this backdrop, empowerment initiatives that combine renewable energy, agriculture, and enterprise development signal a shift toward sustainable, productivity-driven models rather than short-term interventions.
Solar-powered water systems reduce operational costs and mitigate risks associated with erratic electricity supply, a critical factor in ensuring agricultural consistency. By integrating horticulture, poultry, and aquaculture, the project spreads risk across multiple value chains, improving resilience and enhancing income diversification potential for participating youths.
Tendai Sithole, Group Chief Executive Officer of Prevail International, framed the initiative within the broader national empowerment trajectory championed by His Excellency, President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, which prioritises food security, industrialisation, and youth participation as pillars toward Vision 2030. His remarks underscore a growing alignment between private sector actors and Government policy objectives.
Analytically, the project reflects three strategic dimensions. First, it links youth empowerment to production rather than consumption, embedding young people within revenue-generating systems. Second, it embraces climate-conscious infrastructure, positioning renewable energy as a tool for rural transformation. Third, it adopts a scalable framework that, if successfully managed, can be replicated across provinces to address structural unemployment.
However, long-term impact will depend on governance structures, market access, technical training, and financial management capacity among the youth involved. Agricultural infrastructure alone does not guarantee sustainability; effective mentorship, structured value chain integration, and transparent management systems will determine whether the project evolves into a model of national replication or remains a pilot initiative.
If implemented with strategic oversight, the solar-powered agribusiness hub could represent more than a community project, it could signal a practical evolution in Zimbabwe’s youth empowerment architecture, shifting from symbolic empowerment to measurable economic participation.

