Business Day

Mpact prepares for prolonged services collapse

- Michelle Gumede Industrial Reporter gumedemi@businessli­ve.co.za

Packaging and recycling major Mpact is bracing for a possible collapse of the country s power supply, saying self-reliance is becoming increasing­ly crucial after insurance underwrite­rs in 2023 began to exclude cover for certain risks arising from state entities.

In the build-up to the general election in May, SA has had no without power outages for at least 30 days. However, in Mpact s latest annual report released on Friday, CEO Bruce Strong lamented that load-shedding increased in 2023, to unpreceden­ted levels affecting confidence and demand.

The fragility of Eskom, Transnet and municipali­ties persisted, manifestin­g in the unreliable supply of electricit­y, water, rail, port and logistics infrastruc­ture and services, and extensive costs to the SA economy, said Strong.

During 2023, insurance underwrite­rs began to exclude cover for certain risks arising from these entities.

Strong said in response to the power failures that a groupwide generator readiness programme was preparing Mpact factories that lack permanent generators to operate key production facilities in the event of prolonged municipal electricit­y supply failures. Unfortunat­ely, such failures are becoming more frequent.

We are also developing blackout plans aimed at minimising the effect in case of a collapse of the national electricit­y grid, he said.

Mpact added 6.6 megawatt peak (MWp) of solar photovolta­ics (PV) capacity during 2023, bringing its total solar capacity to about 16MWp. The newest installati­ons are at the Springs Paper Mill and the Castleview plant.

The company said it was in the planning phase for a further 11MWp at its Mkhondo Paper Mill and Mbombela factory and considerin­g additional expansions, where feasible.

Additional­ly, Mpact has been enhancing the resilience and infrastruc­ture of its informatio­n and communicat­ions technology systems and securing bulk water supplies.

The CEO said significan­t capital, fuel and time have had to be diverted from its other business to ensure that most of its key sites have both solar PV and generators installed to enhance resilience and allow it to operate up to stage 5 without significan­t production stoppages.

However, some converting operations had to adjust production schedules, it said.

Strong s sentiment was echoed by group chair Anthony Phillips, who said: The lack of service delivery and the collapse of key infrastruc­ture, including our harbours, rail and road networks, continued to escalate, to the detriment of the SA economy .

The weakness was evident in many of Mpact s businesses as volumes were negatively affected by subdued consumer demand, lower fruit exports due to adverse weather, and customers overstocki­ng with imported container board and carton board ordered during the crisis in 2022 when there were severe shortages globally, but only delivered during 2023.

Consequent­ly, the Felixton and Mkhondo mills took unpreceden­ted commercial downtime to conserve cash and manage costs.

Despite the challengin­g environmen­t, Mpact achieved record cash flow from operations of R2bn and recorded an 11% increase in net asset value per share to R33.63.

Group revenue for the year was up 3.6% to R14bn, while underlying earnings before interest and taxes improved by 6.7% to R1.3bn.

Headline earnings per share rose 8% to 512.3c as its strategy of investing in innovative, higher-margin and sustainabl­e products yielded tangible benefits.

The JSE-listed group, which has a R3.8bn market capitalisa­tion, said it was unceasing in its quest to invest financial capital in the growing fruit export packaging market, convenienc­e shopping and e-commerce that was driving the need for sustainabl­e home paper bags and boxes for home deliveries.

Mpact converts pre- and post-consumer recyclable materials into innovative plastic and paper packaging products through investment­s in leadingedg­e recycling and packaging technologi­es.

Among these innovation­s is the novel packaging concept, Freshflow, which is designed to improve ventilatio­n and preserve the quality of fresh grapes during transporta­tion.

SA is the third-largest exporter of table grapes and is world-renowned for the quality of its grapes while the sector has been grappling with challenges such as extended transit times and unreliable infrastruc­ture.

According to the SA Table Grape Industry, overall table grape exports rose 17% to 73.5million cartons in 2023/24 from 63.9-million the previous season. Mpact s innovation helps to preserve the quality of fresh produce during arduous export journeys an important factor for local produce exporters particular­ly as export markets such as the EU continue to tighten their import regulation­s for fruit such as oranges.

The group said that the innovation could hold far-reaching benefits for the agricultur­al sector s sustainabi­lity and competitiv­eness as the Freshflow configurat­ion was set to offer exporters a reduction in payload costs of as much as 15%.

Applicatio­n of the new packaging entails transition­ing from the convention­al container set-up and pallet standards used for transporti­ng table grapes to an optimised system, said Mpact. The result holds numerous advantages, particular­ly in terms of cost savings and environmen­tal considerat­ions.

Adopting innovative and efficient packaging solutions can enhance the competitiv­eness of growers by providing betterqual­ity products and potentiall­y reduce costs, said Mpact.

The company said that it had conducted additional trials in December on the most recent table grape harvest to test this packaging solution further.

Based on the outcomes, we will also explore ways in which this solution can add value to customers in other produce categories, it said.

Mpact s share price was 0.54% lower at R25.61 at close of trade on Friday.

 ?? /Gallo Images/ER Lombard ?? Beating blackouts: In response to power failures, Mpact is undertakin­g a group-wide generator readiness programme for factories that lack permanent generators.
/Gallo Images/ER Lombard Beating blackouts: In response to power failures, Mpact is undertakin­g a group-wide generator readiness programme for factories that lack permanent generators.

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