In a bid to balance ecological preservation with rural economic development, Mozambican authorities have inaugurated a beekeeping project near Magoe National Park in the western province of Tete. The initiative seeks to address longstanding issues of human-wildlife conflict, particularly involving elephants, while offering sustainable income alternatives to surrounding communities.
According to the state news agency Agência de Informação de Moçambique (AIM), the Community Economic Empowerment Project has been launched with an investment of 20 million meticais, approximately 316,105 U.S. dollars. Funded through national development efforts, the programme includes the installation of 4,000 beehives, training sessions for local residents, and the construction of a honey processing facility to support the commercialisation of apicultural products. The aim is to reach an annual production target of 100 tonnes of honey.
The Zambezi Valley Development Agency, which is overseeing the project, emphasised its dual role in both conservation and development. Nelson Antonio, director of the agency’s Technical and Financial Assistance Services, highlighted the innovative application of bees as a deterrent against elephants, citing research indicating that elephants are particularly sensitive to bee stings, especially in vulnerable areas such as the eyes, trunk, and ears.
“Elephants have shown a consistent behavioural pattern of avoiding areas populated by bees,” said Antonio. “By installing beehives along the perimeters of farmland, we are essentially creating a living, non-lethal barrier. Should an elephant disturb a hive, the natural response of the bees often compels the animal to retreat, reducing incidents of crop damage.”
In a context where human-elephant conflict has posed economic and safety risks to rural households, the strategy is seen as a low-cost and environmentally friendly mitigation technique. Similar methods have been trialled with measured success in countries such as Kenya, Botswana, and Tanzania, and have been the subject of peer-reviewed research on wildlife behaviour and conservation agriculture.
The Mozambican project further aims to provide viable economic alternatives to communities that have historically relied on practices such as illegal logging and poaching for survival. By integrating apiculture into the local economy, the initiative aligns with broader conservation objectives within Magoe National Park and its buffer zone, while also contributing to food security and biodiversity resilience.
Momade Juizo, Mozambique’s Secretary of State for Marine Affairs and Fisheries, underscored the anticipated social and economic benefits of the project, which is expected to reach around 500,000 households. While this figure appears ambitious given the scale of the initial investment, officials maintain that the extended value chain—ranging from hive management to honey processing and distribution—has the potential to stimulate wider rural employment and enterprise development.
As environmental and economic pressures converge across Southern Africa, the beekeeping project in Tete Province reflects a growing trend toward nature-based solutions that are both locally adaptive and globally relevant. The initiative illustrates how relatively modest investments in ecological infrastructure can generate multifaceted returns—protecting wildlife habitats, reducing the human footprint within protected areas, and enabling marginalised communities to engage with formal markets.
While the long-term sustainability and scalability of the programme remain to be evaluated, early indications suggest that the model holds promise for replication in other conservation-critical zones within the region. Continued monitoring and independent evaluation will be essential to determine its efficacy and adaptability under varying ecological and socio-economic conditions.
For further reading on wildlife conservation in the region, see WWF: Human-Wildlife Conflict.







