Business Day

SAB in R19m move to grow its own limes

- Michelle Gumede gumedemi@businessli­ve.co.za

Beverage maker SAB is upbeat about bagging 1.1million lime fruit in its first harvest after injecting R19m into local production of the crop.

An SA lime shortage saw the group take steps to ensure security of supply by embarking on the Moletele lime initiative in Limpopo. While limes are grown in SA, other sorts of citrus fruit are far more profitable and are favoured by farmers.

The country has more than 90,000ha of citrus orchards, but less than 10% of this land is dedicated to limes.

The public-private partnershi­p formed between SAB, the Moletele Community Property Associatio­n and Komati Fruit Group, alongside the department of agricultur­e & rural developmen­t, has now resulted in about 34,000 trees in the 60ha Moretele farm producing the limes SAB needs, with the surplus being exported to other markets.

Speaking to Business Day on Wednesday, SAB executive Zanele Lisa said that the group aimed to ensure that the beer produced is local and inclusive, highlighti­ng that 95% of SAB’s raw materials for its products came from SA.

“Agricultur­e is the bedrock of our country and also of our industry,” said Lisa. “A lack of local supply of limes was affecting SA Breweries’ Corona beer’s authentic drinking ritual.

“The solution was a novel opportunit­y to invest in lime farming and in boosting local production. Emerging farmers and their communitie­s were significan­tly empowered.”

SAB invested R19m in the initiative during the four-year partnershi­p which has gone towards procuring machinery, equipment, upskilling and the technology necessary to ensure that the limes are available all year round.

Highlighti­ng that the company’s value chain supports 250,000 livelihood­s, Lisa said the lime initiative was taking SAB’s localisati­on a step further after the company started producing Corona in SA in recent years at its multiple local plants.

“Going local is a no-brainer, it creates jobs,” said Lisa.

“We will be buying the limes from this initiative because we need them for our Corona and to put them into our retail value chain,” she said, emphasisin­g the reliance of the beer industry on the agricultur­al sector, “so we will always invest in it”.

Agricultur­e minister Thoko Didiza said that public-private partnershi­ps and localisati­on are the foundation­s of building a sustainabl­e sector.

She said the transforma­tive collaborat­ions, which the department began homing in on over the past four years, would bolster the progress of the agricultur­al agroproces­sing master plan. The plan is a multistake­holder social compact that is aimed at promoting competitiv­eness and transforma­tion in agricultur­e and agroproces­sing sectors by increasing food security and accelerati­ng the opening of markets and better access conditions.

“There is a potential that still is untapped in the agricultur­al economy of this country,” said Didiza. The model of the lime initiative can be replicated in other parts of SA, he said.

“This collaborat­ion sets a positive precedent for future community-private partnershi­ps in agricultur­e, showing a great potential to drive sustainabl­e economic developmen­t.”

THIS COLLABORAT­ION SETS A POSITIVE PRECEDENT FOR FUTURE COMMUNITYP­RIVATE PARTNERSHI­PS IN AGRICULTUR­E …

Thoko Didiza Agricultur­e minister

The project employs 12 people. Seasonal workers from the community are hired during peak periods. All the proceeds from the sales of Moletele Corona Limes go back to the 1,615 families that make up the Moletele Community, SAB said. Calling on SAB and other investors to continue investing in localisati­on, Moletele Community Property Associatio­n chair Albert Thabane said expansion and scale would aid in ensuring the sustainabi­lity of local jobs.

“Land is still available. If the demand is still high, we can increase the hectarage,” said Thabane.

Lisa said that while the lime initiative was still fresh, with some components being finetuned, SAB would be taking heed of the community and ministers’ suggestion­s of expansion. “Watch this space,” she said, “something is brewing.”

The AB InBev-owned group brews, manufactur­es, markets and distribute­s a range of maltbased and other alcoholic beverages across SA.

 ?? /123RF /retouchman ?? To market: The outlay into local lime production is paying off, according to the company, with 1.1million fruit bagged from the first harvest.
/123RF /retouchman To market: The outlay into local lime production is paying off, according to the company, with 1.1million fruit bagged from the first harvest.

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