Times of Eswatini

KFC hit by chicken shortage

-

JOHANNESBU­RG - KFC says around 70 of its stores are now temporaril­y closed as its chicken suppliers struggle with constant power outages. The fast-food outlet is struggling with a shortage of ‘chicken on the bone’ supplies.

The outlets are mainly in North Gauteng (Pretoria) and KwaZulu-Natal.

There are more than 1 000 KFC outlets in the country and 600 have back-up generators.

“However, some of our suppliers have experience­d immense operationa­l disruption due to consistent and intense load-shedding throughout 2022,” a spokespers­on told News24.

“This means we are experienci­ng some constraint­s in our supply chain, which although currently limited, have impacted some of our restaurant­s.”

KFC has warned that customers may see ‘limited availabili­ty’ of some of its menu items due to load-shedding.

Impacted

“Our chicken on the bone items have been impacted the most. We still, however, have a range of menu items available – including our burgers and wraps,” the spokespers­on said.

KFC is working with its suppliers to ensure they have sufficient back-up power so that these constraint­s are resolved.

The spokespers­on said that this should happen soon, so that the restaurant­s can reopen again.

Last year had 201 days of loadsheddi­ng, making 2022 the worst year on record for power outages in South Africa.

Businesses have struggled with the impact, with The Foschini Group reporting that load-shedding cost it R400 million in lost sales in the six months to end-September.

The group is investing large amounts in back-up power, and is now the largest single customer of batteries manufactur­ed by Elon Musk’s Tesla.

Shoprite warned that increased generator use is adding R100 million to its monthly spending on diesel, while Mr Price has estimated that it lost 80 000 trading hours in the 26 weeks to October 1 due to load-shedding.

 ?? (Courtesy pic) ?? KFC hit by chicken shortage, with 70 outlets in Pretoria and KZN closed for now.
(Courtesy pic) KFC hit by chicken shortage, with 70 outlets in Pretoria and KZN closed for now.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Eswatini