Smallholders get R500m approved for Covid-19 agri disaster fund

The minister of agriculture, land reform and rural development, Thoko Didiza, announced the outcome of the Covid-19 Agricultural Disaster Fund application process. The fund intervention of R1,2bn aims to address the effects of the coronavirus pandemic and ensure sustainable food production post-pandemic.
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The smallholder and communal farmers’ application process opened on 8 April and closed on 22 April 2020, and 33,000 manual application forms were distributed through our provincial and district offices, commodity organisations, and civil society organisations.

"I am pleased to announce that after the closing date, 55,155 applications were received. The Eastern Cape province received the highest number of applications, followed by the Northern Cape and North West. To date, 15,036 applications have been approved and valued just over R500m in favour of smallholder and communal farmers," said Minister Didiza.

Livestock farmers applied most

She said the department will finalise its decision on the remaining applications soon.

"Of the 15,036 approved applications, 5,494 are women, 2,493 youth, 224 people living with disability and males at 9,542. Livestock has been the most requested commodity by farmers, followed by vegetables, poultry, and fruits. Each of the approved farmers will receive inputs in line with the size of their farming operations up to a maximum of R50,000," said Minister Didiza.

The Minister added that a further R400m is being channelled to farmers within the Proactive Land Acquisition Strategy (PLAS) who were already approved for the department’s Stimulus Package as they had initially been budgeted for in the 2019/2020 financial year.

"It must be noted that an amount of R600m had to be reprioritised from the Stimulus Package on PLAS farms in the 2019/2020 budget to assist the other smallholder and communal farmers in terms of this Covid-19 intervention," said Minister Didiza.

The issuance of vouchers to provinces will commence on 18 May 2020. The department engaged the services of different suppliers through an open supply chain management (SCM) process to avoid any delay in the delivery of these inputs.

Lack of proper documentation a set back

Minister Didiza highlighted that there were several lessons learnt from the process, which will require government and the sectors, especially commodity groups working with small-scale and subsistence farmers, to build on the lessons learned. Among others, the department has noted the lack of proper documentation or filing of documents by farmers.

"It saddens me that during this process many of them fell by the sideway because they could not provide proof that they are farmers or farming. The registration of farmers on the Producer Farmer Register will enable the government to locate farmers so that targeted support can be provided," commented the minister.

She urged farmer organisations to assist farmers in formalising their operations, especially insofar as record-keeping is concerned.

Monitoring the Covid-19 programme is crucial

The minister made it clear that monitoring and evaluation of this programme is very important to ensure value for money and food production. To this end, the department will work with various NGOs and civil society organisations to monitor and evaluate the implementation of the intervention on the ground.

"Through this intervention, we want to ensure that agricultural production continues to ensure food security for the country. Food is being produced at farm level and deliveries are made to wholesalers, retailers, fresh produce markets and other critical distribution points," said Minister Didiza.

"We urge the food value chain role players to comply and adhere to strict health regulations to contain and arrest the spread of Covid-19 as we strive to supply food to the nation," concluded Minister Didiza.

Source: AgriOrbit

AgriOrbit is a product of Centurion-based agricultural magazine publisher Plaas Media. Plaas Media is an independent agricultural media house. It is the only South African agricultural media house to offer a true 360-degree media offering to role-players in agriculture. Its entire portfolio is based on sound content of a scientific and semi-scientific nature.

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