Gauteng Smallholder February 2016 | Page 10

NEWS From page 6 railway infrastructure, it will require no fewer than 120 voyages by bulk carriers of about 50 000 DWT (tons of carrying capacity) to deliver the stuff to South African ports. Assuming each ship takes five days to discharge at a rate of 10 000 tons a day, that will equate to 600 port days or 600 days during which ships will be alongside the wharves of South African harbours discharging nothing other than grain. In some cases that is going to lead to congestion at South African harbours. Then, once one has lifted the cargo off the ship one needs something to transport it in, namely railway wagons. Hundreds and hundreds of railway wagons (At between 50 and 60 tons capacity per wagon the railways will require between 100 000 and 120 000 wagon-trips to carry the imports inland!) Wagons which must be brought to the store rainwater runoff and reuse grey water. Because of the lack of rain smallholders, like their harbour, shunted into together to donate water, commercial farmer counterposition, and slowly moved fodder and food to less parts, have not needed their out of the way as they are fortunate countrymen in the filled. To protect the cargo totally stricken areas, and how grass cutting and lawncare equipment much this from rain is also important so some transport companies summer. This has affected if the wagon being used is an have donated freely of their sellers and repairers of such open one it must be covered vehicles' and drivers' time to machines, many of whom are with a tarpaulin, a tedious, deliver the donations. labour-intensive task. There is For Gauteng's smallholders the reporting dismal summer sales figures. some debate among transport drought and extreme yearIronically, the market for experts as to whether Transnet end temperatures will mean has sufficient serviceable that there will be shortages of second-hand machines also appears smaller this season, rolling stock, and even quality fodder this year, tarpaulins, available. coupled with high prices of all with owners hanging on to their old machines rather Oh, and don't think that the feed, for all species (many of than selling them and drought conveniently stops at the hard feeds containing upgrading to something new. the Limpopo River and that yellow maize, among other Economists predict that the other countries in the region grains.) food shortages, coupled with are unaffected. Zimbabwe, Many smallholders have, the consumption of more too, is in the grip of the therefore, begun selling off expensive imports, the latter drought and its looming maize surplus animals, even coupled with a weakening shortage is being put at a consigning some of their further two million tons this breeding stock to the abattoir. exchange rate, will lead to higher prices across the board year. There has also been a for foodstuffs. Sociologists, in One positive of the drought considerable increase in turn, are predicting the has been the way in which interest in processes that can possibility of violent protests ordinary citizens have banded be applied domestically to Importing 6 million tons of maize will strain SA!s port and rail infrastructure Continued on page 10 8 www.sasmallholder.co.za