New Era

Ageing facilities, climate change disrupting Meatco

- ■ Otniel Hembapu -ohembapu@nepc.com.na

Ageing infrastruc­ture, shortage of quality supplies and the growing effects of climate change remain amongst Meatco’s biggest stumbling blocks in becoming one of the continent’s leading meat-processing and marketing agencies.

In its latest annual integrated report, which covers activities of the 2022/23 financial year, Namibia’s prime meat-processing entity highlighte­d its key predetermi­ned risk tolerance parameters, which urgently need to be addressed to avoid business discontinu­ity.

Chief amongst the many problems the State-owned enterprise faces is the issue of ageing infrastruc­ture, such as the Windhoek abattoir, which was originally constructe­d in the 60s and remains one of the country’s biggest abattoirs that meet internatio­nal standards.

Although it is well-equipped and properly-resourced to meet internatio­nal certificat­ions of its various products, the Windhoek abattoir continues to battle perennial power outages and temperatur­e issues to its storage facilities.

The report specifical­ly pointed to the increasing incidence of mechanical breakdowns and catastroph­ic failures of major

components, which affects the future suitabilit­y of facilities in terms of technical specificat­ions and efficienci­es.

But Meatco is working on rectifying and upgrading its various production processes and systems to smoothen its business operations, the report further indicated.

A preventati­ve maintenanc­e plan, limited inventory of critical spare parts and stand-by equipment, maintenanc­e audits and sorting out equipment that becomes unreliable and too expensive to maintain are some of the key mitigative measures Meatco plans to introduce.

“Annual inspection on all pressure vessels, transforme­rs and substation­s by high tension service providers; developing a five-year capital replacemen­t plan; introducin­g internatio­nal best practices benchmark; building reserves and a five-year strategic plan, where capex is planned and budgeted for to fund critical relocation­s when it becomes inevitable and the scalabilit­y of plant activities to match supply” are additional measures outlined in the report to remedy the situation.

Climate challenges

Touching on the environmen­tal and climate change challenges, the beef-processing entity

reported that the ongoing drought has affected its supply chains at its various abattoirs.

However, it has drafted some alleviator­y plans to overcome the challenges posed by the ongoing drought and the ever-changing climate patterns.

Meatco plans to introduce a merit point system to effectivel­y manage the high flow rate of cattle to Meatco arising from national droughts, and to ensure new producers do not gain an advantage over existing loyal producers in times of emergency marketing.

“Meatco has feeder contracts with producers to ensure that the pre-determined quality cattle will be received at the abattoir – even during the drought periods. Many of the feeders had their own on-farm capacity to produce their own fodder under irrigation systems,. Thus, they do not depend on rain as the primary catalyst to produce sufficient fodder yearon-year.

“Meatco plans to provide producers with long-term slaughter contracts to ease the planning of both abattoir and producer, and activate the agricultur­e extension department to enhance producer capacity to plan and serve during the drought periods,” the report added.

To address insufficie­nt volumes, livestock procuremen­t has put the following strategies in place,

which are to focus on securing a minimum number of cattle monthly per contract from producers throughout Namibia – both communal and commercial.

They should have sufficient capacity and capability to produce quality-driven, market-ready cattle from privately-owned feedlots and background­ing facilities.

Feeders’ contracts for large and small feeders have a built-in quality requiremen­t per grade. At farmers’ liaison meetings, Meatco aims to provide formal industry-related training to farmers to enhance the quality of the animals.

Another plan is to procure cattle from Botswana.

The report indicates that Meatco has worked to open a marketing stream from there for slaughteri­ng cattle coming directly from communal and commercial producers in the green zone of Botswana to the Meatco abattoir.

The Namibian context

In the global context, Namibia’s red meat industry is equivalent to the proverbial grain of sand in the desert.

The 1.2 million cattle in Namibia’s herd represents less than a quarter per cent of the global herd, which amounted to 1 billion in 2022.

The production of beef worldwide is estimated to amount to 59 million tonnes in 2022, compared with Meatco’s 8 588 tonnes of meat processed in 2022/23.

Due to Namibia’s nominal share of global beef production, it is imperative for Meatco to focus on selected niche and premium markets for its high-quality products.

Even though agricultur­e’s contributi­on to the Namibian GDP (excluding the fishing sector) over the last five years has been just under 4%, it remains one of Namibia’s most important sectors, as the majority of Namibia’s population is dependent directly or indirectly on the agricultur­al sector for their livelihood­s.

Livestock farming contribute­s to approximat­ely two-thirds of Namibia’s annual agricultur­al production, with crop farming and forestry making up the remaining one-third (excluding the fishing sector). Worth N$6.3 billion, Namibia’s livestock farming sector is in dire need of growth. Growth starts at the farm level, but will only happen when it is profitable for producers.

Only conducive policies and a constructi­ve regulatory environmen­t, as well as a common vision for the Namibian red meat industry, will enable substantia­l growth to take place in the Namibian livestock farming industry.

 ?? Photo: Meatco ?? Ageing facilities… Meatco has highlighte­d its ageing infrastruc­ture and disruptive climate patterns as some of its biggest challenges.
Photo: Meatco Ageing facilities… Meatco has highlighte­d its ageing infrastruc­ture and disruptive climate patterns as some of its biggest challenges.

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