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Meat traders delighted after South Africa resumes poultry imports from Brazil
Meat traders delighted after South Africa resumes poultry imports from Brazil

IOL News

time13-07-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

Meat traders delighted after South Africa resumes poultry imports from Brazil

The ban on poultry and poultry products due to Avian flu has been lifted by the Department of Agriculture on Monday Image: File The Association of Meat Importers and Exporters (AMIE) on Monday welcomed the formal resolution of the temporary suspension on poultry imports from Brazil. Two weeks ago, the Department of Agriculture partially lifted the ban on imports of poultry and poultry products from Brazil, which was imposed due to an outbreak of Avian flu contained to one state in Brazil. This resolution, confirmed by a directive issued by the Directorate of Animal Health on 4 July 2025, allows for the resumption of imports of poultry meat and products from all Brazilian states, except for specific consignments produced during the defined suspension period. The AMIE also commended both the South African and Brazilian authorities for their constructive engagement in finalising the necessary veterinary certification and import protocols. It said importers may now proceed with new applications for veterinary import permits in line with updated requirements. AMIE CEO, Imameleng Mothebe, said that they were deeply encouraged by the conclusion of this process and extend their appreciation to the Department of Agriculture. 'The reopening of trade with Brazil is vital for ensuring the steady supply of poultry products, particularly mechanically deboned meat (MDM), which plays a critical role in the production of affordable processed meats,' Mothebe said. 'This resolution will help restore stability to the supply chain, ease cost pressures, and support food security for South African consumers.' Mothebe also noted the clear procedural guidance provided by the department and encouraged all importers to comply fully with the new conditions to ensure a smooth and compliant re-entry of product into the market. 'We look forward to continued constructive collaboration with government and trade partners to strengthen South Africa's food system, and to ensure it remains resilient, safe, and accessible to all.' Dipepeneneng Serage, deputy director-general for agricultural production, biosecurity and natural resources management at the Department of Agriculture, said they lifted the suspension ban owing to Brazil having declared free status at the World Organisation for Animal Health. Serage said Brazil had contained the Avian flu and later eradicated the outbreak, which it managed to confine to one State of Rio Grande do Sul. BUSINESS REPORT

Urgent call to reopen poultry imports amid supply crisis
Urgent call to reopen poultry imports amid supply crisis

IOL News

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

Urgent call to reopen poultry imports amid supply crisis

The Association of Meat Importers and Exporters (AMIE) has urged the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development to immediately resume poultry imports from countries that have declared themselves free of Avian Influenza, in line with World Organisation for Animal Health guidelines. The Association of Meat Importers and Exporters (AMIE) has urged the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development to immediately resume poultry imports from countries that have declared themselves free of Avian Influenza, in line with World Organisation for Animal Health guidelines. These countries include France (February 4, 2025), Sweden (March 31, 2025), and both Denmark and Belgium (May 23, 2025). The last recorded imports from Denmark were in 2020, when South Africa imported an average of 1 384 metric tons of poultry products per month, including both poultry cuts and mechanically deboned meat (MDM). AMIE on Wednesday also welcomed the Department of Agriculture's commitment to make a determination on a partial lifting of the Brazilian import suspension by the end of this week. This would be based on the fact that the Avian Flu outbreak is contained to the Rio Grande do Sol province in Brazil. Brazilian imports are currently halted due to the Avian Influenza outbreak in Rio Grande do Sol, which produces between 10% to 15% of all poultry in that country. Since local producers are unable to meet total demand, particularly for poultry offal and MDM, which South Africa does not produce at scale, it is critical to diversify supply sources to ensure continued affordability, availability, and market stability, it said. Imameleng Mothebe, the CEO of AMIE, said: 'Opening access to each additional AI-free market will help alleviate some of the current poultry supply gap and reduce the growing economic and food security risks created by the current overall suspension of imports from Brazil. Even with a partial lifting of the suspension of imports from Brazil, there will still be a shortfall that will need to be filled in order to maintain consumption demand in our country. Opening additional markets not only fills this gap, but also future proofs South Africa against AI-related supply shortages.' South African Meat Processors Association urged the government to implement zoning (regionalisation) with all haste. "One of our members, Sky Country Meats, has already been forced to lay off almost 100 employees, with more retrenchments to follow next week if imports of MDM are not restored as a matter of absolute urgency," it said.

South Africa faces poultry supply concerns amid Brazilian import ban
South Africa faces poultry supply concerns amid Brazilian import ban

IOL News

time29-05-2025

  • Health
  • IOL News

South Africa faces poultry supply concerns amid Brazilian import ban

Farming associations and agricultural associations have raised concern about the impact of the Department of Agriculture's ban on chicken from Brazil due to an avian influenza outbreak. Image: supplied South Africa is grappling with potential food insecurity this winter after the Department of Agriculture's has banned chicken from Brazil due to an avian influenza outbreak. The ban, effective since May 15, 2023, halts imports of live poultry, eggs, and fresh or frozen poultry meat, raising alarms over the supply of mechanically deboned meat (MDM) and poultry offal critical for affordable processed meats like polony, viennas, and sausages. The Association of Meat Importers and Exporters warned on Wednesday of serious economic and food insecurity consequences for South Africa as a result of the recent outbreak of Avian Influenza (HPAI) in Brazil. 'Local producers cannot, and will not be able to meet the gap in supply of poultry offal (feet, gizzards, and skins) and MDM, driving up prices and threatening the affordability and accessibility of basic protein for millions,' it said. Georg Southey, the manager at Merlog Foods, said on Wednesday said there is likely to be a shortage of 400 million meals per month, which equates to seven meals per person per month across the country. Two weeks of import shipments have already been wasted, and a further 100 million meals will be lost every week if the government continues with business as usual. Southey added that the country has only 2.5 weeks of food reserves in some key categories. 'This will have devastating consequences for food security and exacerbate a dreadful reality that estimates suggest over 30% of South African households in at least four provinces already have inadequate food and often go hungry,' he added. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad Loading Arnold Prinsloo, CEO of meat producer Eskort, noted that MDM from Brazil is used by Eskort and its competitors to make polony, viennas, Russians, and Braaiwors. "Production lines will come to a standstill before the end of June if the ban on Brazilian chicken is not lifted. This will deprive South Africa's most vulnerable citizens of more than 400 million low-cost meals per month,' he said. Prinsloo added that vulnerable families and thousands of school feeding schemes rely heavily on polony, and there is a real danger of widespread hunger and malnutrition if Eskort and its competitors cannot sustain supplies. 'The Department of Agriculture, which imposed the Brazil ban on 15 May, should follow the example of Namibia and Mozambique by narrowing the ban to chicken from Rio Grande do Sul, the only state affected by avian flu. The rest of Brazil can be regarded as safe, and a pragmatic and proactive decision to accept imports on that basis will go a long way to heading off the looming crisis in South Africa.' However, Izaak Breitenbach, the CEO of the South African Poultry Association, offered a counterpoint, suggesting the impact on poultry meat supply may be overstated. 'South Africa imports a reduced volume of chicken meat from Brazil, and local production can ramp up quickly, especially as demand typically dips this time of year,' Breitenbach said. While acknowledging a shortage of MDM, which is predominantly imported from Brazil, he noted that South Africa produces minimal MDM domestically and may shift imports to countries like Thailand. 'There will not be a shortage of chicken meat, but MDM supply will be constrained,' he clarified. Investment analyst Anthony Clark from Smalltalkdaily Research said that America and Europe have also reported avian influenza outbreaks. 'Brazil is the biggest exporter of poultry products into South Africa. They have a market share of around 80%, so it is concerning that there is a ban on their products. This means that there is very little chicken coming into this country. However, products that are coming in from Brazil are MDM which goes into processed meat such as polony, viennas, and Russians. The other products that are still coming in from Brazil are chicken offals such as carcasses, heads, and livers.'

Chicken crisis in South Africa: Here's why offal prices have skyrocketed
Chicken crisis in South Africa: Here's why offal prices have skyrocketed

The South African

time28-05-2025

  • Health
  • The South African

Chicken crisis in South Africa: Here's why offal prices have skyrocketed

The Association of Meat Importers and Exporters (AMIE) has warned of serious economic and food insecurity consequences for South Africa as a result the recent outbreak of Avian Influenza (HPAI) in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul. Local producers cannot, and will not be able to meet the gap in supply of poultry offal (feet, gizzards, and skins) and mechanically deboned meat (MDM), driving up prices and threatening the affordability and accessibility of basic protein for millions. Brazil is the world's largest exporter of poultry products, and accounts for 73% of poultry (excluding MDM) imported by South Africa, including frozen bone-in chicken and offal (feet, livers, necks and carcasses). It also exports 92% of all MDM imported to South Africa, with a monthly average of 18 000 metric tons over the past year, which is vital in the production of processed meat products. Imameleng Mothebe, CEO of AMIE, says, 'Chicken offal and MDM are not luxuries. They are foundational to school feeding programmes, and the production of processed meats which are the most affordable proteins for low-income households. Ultimately, Brazilian MDM is the source of over 400 million poultry-based meals per month for South Africa. 'Whilst we appreciate the commitment by SA poultry producers to increase their production by four million birds per month during the closure of Brazil poultry exports, the fact is that local producers alone cannot fill the gap in the production of offal and SA effectively does not produce MDM at commercial scale. In addition, alternative international markets also do not have the scale or available supply of the product mix to replace Brazil's exports to South Africa.' The table below of official South African import statistics per month, indicates the number of chickens required per category to meet local demand for offal. Cut Description Average Metric Tonnes (Mt) Imported from Brazil Per Month Estimated Number of Chickens required Chicken Feet 4 071 54 million Chicken Livers 467 10 million Chicken Gizzards 1 505 31 million Using the estimated output of an additional four million birds a month from local producers, and bearing in mind that the local industry will not be able to produce any additional MDM, the following shortfalls in offal per month will remain: Chicken feet – 3 773 MT tonnes per month Gizzards – 1 315 MT tonnes per month Livers – 287 MT tonnes per month. Mothebe said, 'Without urgent action to put in place a regionalisation agreement with Brazil, which would allow for the import of products from areas not affected by the outbreak, price increases and food shortages for consumers, and job losses for local manufacturers of processed meats who employ over 125 000 workers, will follow.' The economic impact of the shortfalls are already being felt in the market, warns Mothebe. With the current shortage of MDM, processed meat producers are facing cost surges as inventory levels are thinning, and shelf prices are starting to reflect this reality. MDM prices have surged from R13 to R31/kg, while offal like gizzards and skins have seen double-digit increases. These increases will be compounded by rising input costs, especially with the recently announced fuel levy hike in the national budget, which adds inflationary pressure across the value chain. This pressure will inevitably be passed on to consumers, resulting in food affordability pressures for the majority of the consumers. Mothebe says, 'We support government continuing engagements with Brazil towards regionalisation, a concept that demarcates affected areas whilst the rest of the country remains open. Regionalisation is widely accepted and supported by the World Organisation of Animal Health (WOAH), especially in light of the ongoing global diseases phenomenon.' Many countries are currently concluding regionalisation agreements with Brazil and therefore will soon be re-opening their markets to Brazilian imports. This week Namibia announced the re-opening of poultry imports from Brazil as a result of concluding regionalisation agreement between the two countries. Mothebe says, 'We urge that the conclusion of engagements between South Africa and Brazil are expedited, to minimise the impact on the South African economy and consumers alike. 'The current situation is not just a trade issue, it's about protecting jobs, businesses, consumer affordability and food security'. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Brazil bird flu outbreak sparks fear of ban
Brazil bird flu outbreak sparks fear of ban

eNCA

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • eNCA

Brazil bird flu outbreak sparks fear of ban

JOHANNESBURG - Meat importers have their feathers ruffled over a possible ban on Brazilian poultry. It comes after an outbreak of Avian flu in the South American country. They say government should only target affected areas and not cull the whole country. Brazil accounts for 84 percent of all poultry imports. CEO of the Association of Meat Importers and Exporters, Imameleng Mothebe, says this outbreak will have a repelling effect on the South African economy.

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