Thokozile Didiza has expressed deep concerns about the impact of load-shedding in agriculture and agribusinesses in the country.
Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform, and Rural Development, Thokozile Didiza, has expressed deep concerns about the impact of load shedding in agriculture, agribusinesses, and the broader food, fiber and beverages sectors.
Didiza met with leaders of the agriculture sector and food, fiber and beverages value chains last week, to assess the impact of load shedding on business activity and plans for the sector going forward.
Challenges
The industry leaders conveyed the difficulties faced by businesses, workers, and associates.
They also highlighted the threat to food security in the event that load shedding continues to take place at short notice, without joint strategies on how to mitigate the impact through contingency plans and predictability.
Alternative energy
Agriculture, Land Reform, and Rural Development spokesperson Reggie Ngcobo said the possible development of alternative energy sources within the sector was also analyzed.
“The meeting resolved that the minister establish a small sector task team comprising government, industry participants, and energy specialists that will continuously monitor the impact of load shedding in the sector and its ability to provide safe and nutritious food to South Africans.
“The technical work of measuring the financial costs is underway and will help draft the sector strategy. The task team will also explore short, medium, and long-term interventions to ease the burden of load shedding within the farming, food, fiber, and beverages value chains,” he said.
Impact
Didiza acknowledged the difficulty faced by businesses and thanked the leaders for their “heroic efforts” to supply food to the country under challenging conditions.
“Despite the current challenges, the agricultural industries will continue to ensure that availability of food and fiber is assured,” said Didiza
Food security
Meanwhile, the financial impact on farmers and agribusinesses or food security is not yet clear and will be difficult to quantify, Agbiz reported.
“At Agbiz, we have sent out a survey to collect critical data that will help us understand the scale of the financial impact of this crisis on the sector.”
“There are also food security concerns as the effect of load shedding will probably show in the volumes of products to be harvested/produced later in the coming months due to the time lag in agricultural production stages.”
Job losses
Agbiz said the other emerging concern is the impact on jobs if businesses are severely affected.
“There is a real danger that some farmers could lose their crops, which would impact the farms’ financial future and likely negatively impact agricultural financiers,” it said.
Source: Knysnaplettherald