Press release
The deciduous fruit industry body, Hortgro, has been closely
monitoring the situation of producers and agricultural workers affected
by the prolonged drought.
Especially stone fruit producers in the Little Karoo from Montagu,
Barrydale, Ladismith, Calitzdorp, through to Prince Albert, have
suffered severely; with some even losing their farms, and many
farmworkers without income and jobs. More than 300 hectares of deciduous
fruit trees have died and more than 610 farmworkers have lost their
jobs with an estimated 2 440 dependants.
Hortgro in association with the Canning Fruit Producers’ Association,
Agri Western Cape, Agri SA and Wine TU have pooled resources to help
producers in the Little Karoo financially to carry on with the rest of
the production season. Funds were also made available to contain
regional crop protection risks.
On the humanitarian front, Hortgro recently held a ‘resilience
workshop’ for producers and farm workers in Ladismith to empower them
mentally with coping strategies. Funds were also made available for a
thousand food parcels that will be distributed to affected farmworkers
in the region, before Christmas.
We are urging producers and stakeholders in other parts of the
country that want to help with the drought effort, financially or in any
other capacity, to please contact Hortgro’s Group Operational Manager,
Mariette Kotze.
For more information, email Mariette@hortgro.co.za
Relevant pages on Agribook.Digital include "Weather and climate".
This was the initial blog of The Agri Handbook, South Africa's biennial reference book for the agri-food industry where you will find points of reference for all subsectors which make up the agricultural value chain. Whether you are a new farmer looking at your options or an old hand wanting to diversify your operations but wondering where to start, you will find value here. Visitors are invited to also look at https://agribook.co.za/ where the latest chapters may be read.
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