The Mercury

PIC takes full control of Daybreak

- Luyolo Mkentane

THE EMBATTLED Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) has acquired full control of poultry producer Daybreak Farms after the Competitio­n Tribunal approved the takeover with conditions.

The tribunal said the PIC should engage in the investment of “certain assets, management and administra­tion of pensions and other benefits and compensati­on of employees emanating from injury or disease through the course of employment, respective­ly”.

The purchase by the PIC, Africa’s largest fund manager which controls nearly R2 trillion on behalf of the Government Employees Pension Fund, come after the ANC in January called on the government to buy beleaguere­d poultry farms negatively affected by “dumping” of cheap chicken from the US, Brazil and the EU.

In February, Daybreak Farms issued a stern warning that 3 000 direct jobs would be negatively affected should imports of the chicken portions continue.

The poultry producer, which has an integrated operation with its own feed mill that manufactur­es and supplies broiler feed, broke the mould last year when it reportedly tapped on the township and informal sector by creating a network of franchisee­s that were provided with freezers, on condition they only stocked its products.

The domestic poultry sector has been hard done by poultry imports from outside South Africa’s borders.

As part of the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act, which provides duty-free market access to the US for qualifying African states, including South Africa, the US exports 65 000 tons of chicken a year into the country.

The imports have seen poultry producers such as RCL Foods laying off more than 1 000 employees and selling about 13 of its 25 farms in Hammarsdal­e, KwaZulu-Natal (KZN).

However, in April the eThekwini municipali­ty offered RCL Foods R15 million for the Uitkomst and Doornrug chicken farms, as part of its Radical Agrarian Socio-Economic Transforma­tion Programme.

In an exclusive interview with Business Report last month, Jim Sumner, the president of the USA Poultry and Egg Export Council, defended the global power house’s controvers­ial stance on the imports, saying chicken consumptio­n exceeded production in South Africa. He said while chicken production increased yearly in the country, consumptio­n ballooned faster.

The poultry industry has also been dealt a blow by the persistent avian influenza scourge which has been confirmed in Gauteng, Mpumalanga, North West, KZN and the Eastern Cape.

More than 700 000 birds have been culled in the country in June.

 ??  ?? Food and Allied Workers Union and South African Poultry Associatio­n members during their protest march in February to the EU office in Pretoria.
Food and Allied Workers Union and South African Poultry Associatio­n members during their protest march in February to the EU office in Pretoria.

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