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Freight & Trading Weekly

Positive growth in abolone industry

17 Jun 2016 - by Liesl Venter
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Despite the challenging

business environment,

perishable export volumes are

on the rise.

That’s according to Andries

Mouton, managing director

of Paltrack, a supplier of

software solutions to the

agricultural industry and a

subsidiary of Resolve Solution

Partners.

“Even though there has

been a decline in some

products and geographical

areas, the overall pattern is

positive,” he said. “Within the

aquaculture industry, there

is an increase in production

units, specifically within the

abalone industry.”

In recent years, the

aquaculture industry in South

Africa has increasingly been

driving and implementing

initiatives to protect the

survival of the abalone

species.

The Department of

Environmental Affairs shut

down the commercial wild

abalone industry in 2008

when stock levels reached

precariously low levels.

If poaching of abalone or

perlemoen, as it is most often

referred to in South Africa,

had continued at the rate

reported before the turn of the

decade, the species would be

in danger of extinction.

South African farmers and

researchers started working

proactively on a solution to

prevent the extinction of

abalone in the 1990s and

in the process established a

foundation for a sustainable

national aquaculture industry.

“Today, the South African

abalone industry is one of

the largest outside Asia,” says

Mouton. “Most farms are

expanding production and

the industry is set to grow. In

addition to aquaculture, we

are also seeing real growth in

technology adoption in the

fruit packhouse sector, which

is encouraging.”

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FTW - 17 June 2016

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