Drainage of Mozambique

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Also known as: República de Moçambique, Republic of Mozambique

News

Activists take on internet service providers over clampdown in Mozambique Nov. 21, 2024, 12:04 AM ET (Daily Maverick)
Development bloc concerned about Mozambique’s post-election violence Nov. 20, 2024, 12:17 PM ET (Voice of America)
Mozambique president wants talks to end weeks of post-election unrest Nov. 20, 2024, 6:17 AM ET (Voice of America)
EU Gives Rwanda Extra €20 Million to Fight Terror in Mozambique Nov. 19, 2024, 12:17 AM ET (Bloomberg)

Mozambique’s ample water resources have the potential to compensate for the mixed quality of its soils. Major river systems provide alluvial deposits and offer both hydroelectric and irrigation potential. The Rovuma (Ruvuma) River defines most of Mozambique’s northern border with Tanzania. The Zambezi River and its tributaries dominate the central region, and the Maputo River forms part of the southernmost boundary with Swaziland and South Africa. Rivers—including the Lúrio, Ligonha, Save (Sabi), Changane, and Incomáti (Komati)—also define many of the country’s local political boundaries. Other important drainage systems include the Messalo River in the north, the Púngoè (Púnguè), Revuè, and Búzi rivers, which enter the Mozambique Channel together just south of the port of Beira, and the Limpopo River in the south.

The massive Zambezi flows 509 miles (819 km) through the country and drains more than 87,000 square miles (225,000 square km) of the central region. The Rovuma, Lúrio, Save, and Messalo systems follow in size, respectively. Mozambique shares the borders of Lakes Nyasa, Chiuta, and Chilwa with Malawi, but aside from these and the lakes created by the country’s hydroelectric dam network—particularly the extensive system created by the Cahora Bassa Dam at Songo on the Zambezi—the country has no important lakes.

Soils

Africa’s ancient basement complex of granite rock underlies most of northern and west-central Mozambique, whereas the soils of the southern and east-central regions are sedimentary. Mozambique’s soils are diverse in quality and type, but the northern and central provinces have generally more fertile, water-retentive soils than does the south, where sandy, infertile soils prevail. The northern soils, whose qualities allow agricultural potential to extend beyond the river valleys, have a higher content of red clay, with a varying range of fertility. In contrast, the central region has a broad expanse of rich alluvial soils along the Zambezi delta. South of Beira, fertility is largely limited to alluvial soils in the valleys of the Save, Limpopo, Incomáti, Umbelúzi, and Maputo rivers, although several pockets of fertile but heavy soil occur southwest of Inhambane.