The Mercury

SA has enough milk supply to last the year, says Clover

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FOODS and beverages company Clover yesterday said the country would have enough milk supply until the end of the year despite the devastatin­g drought that has ravaged the southern African region.

Clover said its key milk producing regions of the Western Cape and KZN had not been affected by the drought.

Chief executive Johann Vorster said the drought had not yet affected the supply of milk in the country. “These two areas haven’t been really affected by the drought and our milk supply is in good shape.”

The company said only the weakening foreign exchange rate had pushed up cost inflation and forced Clover to raise selling prices on all product categories in April.

Vorster said it also experience­d sharp increases in ingredient­s costs.

He said that although the country was covered for milk at the moment, related costs such as currency fluctuatio­ns and high feed costs could force it to review its prices.

“The severe drought… has resulted in low availabili­ty of various feed components and this has, in turn, led to very high feed prices, which are still escalating and affecting raw milk production,” said Vorster.

Paul Makube, a senior agricultur­al economist at FNB, said the high feed costs could have a negative impact on the price of milk in the future.

Stable prices

Makube said they expected prices to remain stable with predicted rains going forward.

Another agricultur­al economist, Wandile Sihlobo from Agbiz, said the country had enough milk supply currently.

“There is an oversupply of milk globally. Normally the supply of milk during the winter season is down not only because of the drought but the winter season which is dry adds to the lower milk production. If the country doesn’t have milk it can import it lower prices.”

But the Land Bank warned that the persisted drought has already affected the country’s dam levels. The bank’s chief executive Petrus Nchocho said dam levels were sitting at an average of 53 percent throughout the country.

Nchocho said this would result in less grain production at for the year, especially maize, which could push the prices up. He said the drought would affect the agricultur­al industry on how it had serviced its debt.

“At the end of the day it balances out because if a farmer from one region has been badly affected, the other farmer in another area might not be affected at all. So that is why we have managed to see our non performing loans (NPL) decreasing despite the drought. NPLs are 8.8 percent to R2.2 billion as compared to 9.7 percent in 2015.”

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