Mass-culling
According to Agri SA's deputy executive director, Christo van der Rheeder, South Africa has lost 15% of its livestock because of increased slaughtering necessitated by the drought. "We have reports of farmers mass-culling. They have no choice. If they do not they will be wiped out financially."
Van der Rheeder said that so far the culls had mainly been of "noncore" livestock. "The problem [will come] when there are no non-core herds left to cull. Some farmers have herds of 3,000 animals.
"When that happens, food prices will skyrocket. In February food inflation peaked at 7% because of the drought.
"December will be a horror story, especially with the price of meat rising."
Aid only for emerging farmers
Van der Rheeder said commercial farmers should get drought relief. "Last month Deputy Agriculture Minister Bheki Cele made it clear to Agri SA and other stakeholders that government aid would only be for emerging farmers. "What Cele does not realise is that commercial farmers feed the nation," he said.
Van der Rheeder said the government initially made R300-million available to provincial agriculture departments to purchase fodder and drill boreholes, but none went to commercial farmers. "We need state guarantees for farmers who have suffered huge losses due to the drought and are unable to get Landbank loans to rebuild their herds," he said.