AgriSA is set to oppose power
supplier Eskom’s application
for a 19.9% tariff for next
year, highlighting that the
perishables sector will be
hardest hit – and it could be
the last straw for marginal
farmers, on the back of the
debilitating drought in some
parts of the country.
Dr Requier Wait, head
of trade and commerce at
the industry lobby group,
highlighted that the rate
of cost increases in the
agricultural sector outpaced
the growth in revenue.
Electricity represented a
growing share of these costs,
he said.
“Farmers who irrigate
their crops – including grain,
fruit and vegetable growers
– are especially exposed to
increases in electricity cost.
The fruit and vegetable sector
further has to maintain the
cold chain in their packing
and storage processes, which
again relies on electricity,”
Wait pointed out.
He believes agricultural
producers have limited room
to mitigate big tariff increases,
as the Eskom tariff structure
provides for a large fixed
cost for the availability of
transmission and distribution
lines.
Government support for
farmers was extremely low
compared with international
norms, Wait added.
Perishable sector power struggle
13 Oct 2017 - by Staff reporter
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FTW 13 October 2017

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