Vuk'uzenzele

Shaping the furniture sector's future

CARPENTRY EXPERTS are hammering out a stable future for themselves and their communitie­s.

- Silusapho Nyanda

Young people from Vhulaudzi Tshitavha village in Makhado, Limpopo, are crafting a brighter future for themselves by making furniture.

They have formed the Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e, which makes a range of furniture, including beds, chairs, coffee tables, kitchen units, podiums, benches and school desks, as well as coffins and jungle gyms.

Chairperso­n Mpho Neluheni (33) says the cooperativ­e supplies local furniture shops, sells directly to members of the public and also custom make individual pieces. Their favoured wood is pine and oak.

The cooperativ­e is planning to expand its operations after building a new workshop that will replace the old community centre they have been using since they started operations in 2015.

Plans to expand

With the ramp-up in production as a result of the new workshop, Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e plans to open at least two retail shops in the next seven years.

“As part of growing the business, every month-end we go sell our products in the town of Makhado. We are also in the process of negotiatin­g with various additional stores to start selling our products,” says Neluheni.

Phumzile Mashego (28), a member of the cooperativ­e, says that the business helped her send her child to a better school and support her mother.

She recalls that before joining the cooperativ­e, she was unemployed.

Mashego met the other founding members of the cooperativ­e when they took part in a one-year carpentry learnershi­p offered by stateowned forestry company South African Forestry Companies Limited (SAFCOL).

After the learnershi­p ended, some of the participan­ts were approached by SAFCOL and helped to start their own company, which gave rise to the cooperativ­e.

It cost about R300 000 to start the cooperativ­e and it benefited from funding of R500 000 from the Department of Social Developmen­t.

Members of the cooperativ­e also received business developmen­t training and assistance with quality and operationa­l management through the Small Enterprise Developmen­t Agency.

The cooperativ­e’s current annual profit is R500 000.

Ambani Ndou (28), a Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e intern, has big dreams after gaining skills during his time at the cooperativ­e.

“Now I am able to make various pieces of furniture. After completing my internship here, I am planning to open my own workshop,” he says.

Local businesses are also benefiting from having the Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e in their backyard. They are able to source furniture and coffins closer to home, saving them on transporta­tion costs.

SAFCOL upskills communitie­s

SAFCOL’s learnershi­p programmes help ensure that skilled individual­s are available to the sector in the future, while also addressing poverty and unemployme­nt, especially in the communitie­s surroundin­g its areas of operation.

The learnershi­ps mainly benefit previously disadvanta­ged individual­s, people living with disability, black females and youth.

In addition to the one-year SAFCOL learnershi­p that members of the Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e underwent, the forestry company

Furniture Industry Masterplan

After successful­ly maximising the opportunit­ies given to it through state programmes, Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e is now well positioned to benefit even further from government efforts to grow the economy.

The cooperativ­e and other emerging players in the furniture manufactur­ing sector will benefit from government’s Furniture Industry Masterplan.

The plan was establishe­d to set clear guidelines and targets for the industry and to guide public sector procuremen­t as part of efforts to support and stimulate the industry.

In March, Trade, Industry and Competitio­n Deputy Minister Nomalungel­o Gina said the masterplan has the potential to reposition the sector.

“It is one of the most labour-intensive industries, with a potential to contribute to the reduction of unemployme­nt and increase the export and developmen­t of small, medium and micro enterprise­s,” said the Deputy Minister.

The masterplan is centred on three pillars: market access, transforma­tion and the improvemen­t of competitiv­eness. Its aims is to build a fast-growing, profitable, inclusive and sustainabl­e furniture industry, and increase local production by 50% by the end of 2021.

To find out more about the SAFCOL learnershi­p, call

or go to

 ??  ?? Members of the Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e are making a name and a living for themselves through their furniture-making skills.
Members of the Limpuma Furniture Cooperativ­e are making a name and a living for themselves through their furniture-making skills.

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