कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

Potato profit margins hindered by municipal fresh produce markets

Farmer's Weekly

|

June 06, 2025

The insidious decay of municipal fresh produce markets over the past few decades has had far-reaching consequences for the fresh produce industry. As the largest traded commodity, potatoes have been especially hard hit. Willie Jacobs, CEO of Potatoes SA, spoke to Lindi Botha about the impact and the way forward.

-  Lindi Botha

Potato profit margins hindered by municipal fresh produce markets

How are local potato farmers being affected by the decline of municipal fresh produce markets?

The primary impact is twofold. Firstly, the markets have not kept up with the growth in fresh produce volumes delivered to them over the past three decades. This means they don’t have the capacity to handle the current volumes, with significantly greater negative impact when volumes start peaking in a season.

Floor space, cooling facilities, loading and parking bays, and transaction systems aren't adequate. The severe lack of maintenance in certain cases means the floors have potholes, so forklifts owned and operated by market agents – because the markets haven't provided these – get damaged.

imageFrequent power outages mean lighting is often absent, cooling facilities aren’t working, and transaction systems are offline. If the latter aren’t working, everything comes to a standstill and produce can't be sold.

Secondly, since the markets don’t have the throughput capacity for the volumes, the produce sits for extended periods on the floor, where quality deteriorates. Lower quality means lower prices for farmers, and ultimately less income for the market since they get paid a percentage of the sale price. In some cases, the quality deteriorates to the point where produce is sent back to farmers, who then suffer major financial losses.

The national markets currently handle on average 1,2 million 10kg bags of potatoes per week. But anything above 800 000 bags in stock at any given point creates bottlenecks and means that stock is carried over for more than two days, decreasing the quality. To prevent financial losses as a result of lowered quality, the markets nationally must be able to handle more than 400 000 10kg bags per day.

Farmer's Weekly से और कहानियाँ

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

South Africa's unique coral trees

Every year in late winter, South Africa's eastern coastal belt is set ablaze with the scarlet and orange flowers of certain coral tree species from the genus Erythrina. Mike Burgess investigates the diversity of this special category of highly adaptive deciduous trees that includes the peculiar ploughbreaker.

time to read

2 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Jaecoo J5 is ready to make waves

Chinese carmakers have been growing their local market share at the rate of knots over the last few years. The introduction of the Jaecoo J5 will further ensure the upward curve

time to read

2 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Farm watches take charge of rural safety

With rural crime on the rise and police resources stretched thin, farm watches across South Africa are stepping up to protect farming communities. These volunteer-led safety networks are preventing millions in losses, deterring criminal activity and helping police solve major crimes, proving that when farmers unite, the benefits ripple far beyond the farm gate.

time to read

8 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

How to start a farm watch in your area

Rural safety initiatives like farm watch systems are guided by the framework laid out in the national Rural Safety Strategy. Dr Jane Buys, safety risk analyst for Free State Agriculture, talks Sabrina Dean through the concept of a farm watch and how to establish one

time to read

9 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

'Farm attacks are a national crisis'

The rural safety crisis in South Africa remains dire, with farm attacks and murders continuing at alarming rates. This calls for rural crimes to be declared priority crimes as a matter of urgency, according to

time to read

3 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Advancing real-time data collection in South African agriculture

Dr Mahlane Godfrey Kgatle, Research Coordination Manager at Grain South Africa, spoke to Octavia Avesca Spandiel about how the Information Hub at Innovation Africa, University of Pretoria, is transforming agricultural research through real-time data integration and collaboration across disciplines.

time to read

3 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

Stellenbosch in November: a seasonal gem and the perfect time to visit

Brian Berkman suggests you clear your diary to spend more time in November in the beautiful Eikestad.

time to read

3 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Adapting to the Climate Change Act: how agro-processing SMEs can build resilience

Wynand Deyzel, commercial sales manager at Solenco, spoke to Octavia Avesca Spandiel about how the Act is shaping the operational durability of small to medium-sized agricultural enterprises and the role of indoor air management in adapting to climate impacts.

time to read

3 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Farmer's Weekly

KWV shines at Veritas Awards with top accolades

KWV made history at the 35th Veritas Awards when it clinched the prestigious Duimpie Bayly Vertex Trophy – the award for the best wine in the show, excluding Museum Class Wine – for the second year in a row and third time overall.

time to read

2 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Farmer's Weekly

Co-operation needed to build a resilient food system

From governments and international organisations to farmers, researchers, businesses, and consumers, including the youth, everyone has a role to play in shaping the transformation of agrifood systems of the world

time to read

2 mins

November 7-14, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size