A programme
supported by the Jobs Fund’s is benefitting black small-scale farmers in
Sekororo, a rural community in Limpopo province that produces food that is sold
all over South Africa.
The Sekororo
farmers, who are participating in the Lima Smallholder Farmer Support
Programme, have seen their farming enterprises being transformed overnight,
thanks to the comprehensive assistance they are getting from the programme,
which has helped them access markets and generate employment in an area where
jobs are scarce.
The Lima
Smallholder Farmer Support Programme is designed to deliver integrated support
services to beneficiary farmers in the form of loans, agricultural inputs
(fertilisers, feeds, seedlings), mechanisation, and technical advice. It also
assists farmers to access markets for their produce through off-take contracts
negotiated with food retailers and wholesalers.
The programme
aims to create 4, 700 jobs and equip 12, 800 farmers nationally with training
in business management, annual crop production, and livestock production. It has so far created just over 3,800 of
these jobs.
One of the
Sekororo farmers who is benefitting from the programme is poultry farmer and
retired school principal, Khensani Mboweni, who joined the programme in August
2017. She employs seven people, of whom three are permanent, and supplies
chickens to a reliable market that includes local residents and tshisa nyamas.
The demand is so high she often needs to convince her customers to not take the
chickens before they reach maturity.
“I started
poultry farming as a backyard project in 2009, producing between 200 and 250
chickens. As time went on, the community needed more chickens, so I built two
extra houses for broilers and egg layers. I am currently producing about 3,100
chickens.
“When I retired
in 2017 after 40 years as a teacher, I joined the Lima programme. I have received two
production loans from Lima,
which I have paid off. I am now busy repaying my third loan of R64,000”,
explains Mboweni, whose husband is an agricultural technician and cattle
farmer.
Business is
picking up for this former educator, who has since managed to buy a bakkie with
the proceeds from the farm.
A few kilometres
from Mboweni’s farm is another female farmer, Lucy Hutamo, who is also a
retired teacher. Hutamo practices irrigated crop farming on 7 hectares of land and
was first assisted by Lima
in April 2017 to access fertilisers and chemicals to spray her crops.
She employs five
permanent workers and supplies baby marrows, green pepper, brinjals,
watermelons, and tomatoes to food markets in Cape Town,
Pretoria, Johannesburg,
and Durban.
“I went to Lima to ask for
assistance because I was not successful at farming due to lack of expertise and
funding. They gave me technical advice and extended two loans that helped me
buy chemicals and seeds. Since then, we
have developed a relationship with Lima
that has led to a huge improvement in our business. We used to produce 100
crates of vegetables, but now we produce between 300 and 400 crates,” says
Hutamo.
She employs five
people on her farm and sells her produce via agents to fresh produce markets
and to the agri-hub set up by Lima
in Sekororo. The agri-hub was
implemented to assist farmers that seek to access Lima’s integrated support services.
“In the Sekororo
site, we have created about 200 jobs through the production of cabbages and
butternuts. The Sekororo agri-hub is crucial to supplying farmers with feeds,
fertilisers, seeds, and medication, which we supply in partnership with input
suppliers. We have about 800 farmers that are serviced by this agri-hub,” explains
Lynette Parsons, Lima’s
national programme manager.
So far the Sekororo agri-hub has off-take agreements with retailers such as Spar, Boxer Stores, and Fruit and Veg. About 80% of fresh produce in South Africa is sold through informal markets, with street traders and hawkers being the main distributors.
Lima
is in the process of identifying 10 Sekororo beneficiary farmers, who will be
trained to take over ownership of the agri-hub. The plan is to have Lima officials gradually
hand over responsibilities of managing the agri-hub to the 10 farmers. This will
require that they transfer skills to the farmers.
“The commercial
partners (off-takers and input suppliers) are key to the future of the
agri-hub. For instance, input suppliers do not only provide technical support
to farmers, they also provide bulk discounts since the agri-hub buys in bulk
for the farmers. These financial benefits are crucial for a place that used to
battle with input supply as it is in a remote part of the country,” explains
Parsons.
Lima
is adding a pack house to the Sekororo project, where fresh produce from all
farmers participating in the project will be aggregated, packaged, and
delivered to customers.
Crop farmer and
former lecturer, Linda Ngatsane, has offered to share a pack house on her
21-hectare farm with other emerging farmers in the area.
“We have a pack
house that we use to package our products such as green beans, cucumber, and
sweet potatoes. Our aim is to brand and sell our products in shops and export
markets,” says Ngatsane, who sells her produce to Johannesburg’s fresh produce market in City
Deep and informal traders.
The partnership
between the Jobs Fund and Lima
has laid a solid foundation for the future sustainability of the Sekororo
smallholder farmers and more farmers in the area could end up joining the
project to grow their farm ventures.
Read the "Emerging farmer support", "Finance for new farmers and SMMEs", "Poultry" and other pages on Agribook.Digital.
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