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Western Cape Business 2023

  • Text
  • Bpo
  • Roads
  • Digital
  • Business
  • Investment
  • Green hydrogen
  • Resesarch
  • Industrial
  • Manufacturing
  • Renewables
  • Greentech
  • Provincial
  • Infrastructure
  • Hydrogen
  • Economy
  • Renewable
  • Economic
  • African
  • Sector
  • Western
A unique guide to business and investment in the Western Cape, the 2023 edition of Western Cape Business is the 16th issue of this highly successful publication that, since its launch in 2005, has established itself as the premier business and investment guide for the Western Cape. The Western Cape has several investment and business opportunities. In addition to the regular articles providing insight into each of the key economic sectors of the province, a special feature focuses on how the province’s Special Economic Zones have the potential to shift the energy debate in the Western Cape. The Atlantic Special Economic Zone is positioning itself as a greentech hub and wants to attract manufacturers in the renewable energy sector and automobile component manufacturers for the electronic era. It is encouraging tenants to reduce carbon emissions and use renewable energy. Up the coast at the Saldanha Bay Industrial Development Zone, the provincial government has not given up hopes of persuading national government to site a gas plant there, but in the meantime the race for green hydrogen might have supplanted the original wish. An expert from the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) provides insights into green hydrogen in a two-page article.

OVERVIEW Grapes and wine

OVERVIEW Grapes and wine Logistics are testing farmers’ ingenuity. SECTOR INSIGHT White wines fetched top prices at the 2022 Nedbank Cape Winemakers Guild Auction. Grape farmers, wine producers and exporters have had their hands full coping with a series of challenges that go beyond the normal worries about weather, unpredictable customer preferences, global competition and variable pricing. Logjams at the Port of Cape Town create headaches for exporters of time-dependent fruit and just as Covid-19 restrictions were coming to an end, Russia invaded Ukraine, putting some of the income derived from exports in jeopardy. Nearly 2% of South African wine is exported to Russia. In 2021 the volume increased to nearly seven-million litres. With payment normally made through SWIFT, Russia’s expulsion from that system made transactions impossible. Despite these headwinds, the volumes of grapes inspected for export in the 2022/23 season were expected to decrease by only 8% in comparison to 2021/22 season figures. This estimate was released by the South African Table Grape Industry Association (SATI), headquartered in Paarl, South Africa, which estimated a crop total of approximately 71.7-million cartons (4.5kg equivalent). SATI noted how farmers have focussed on crop-load management and quality to overcome logistical issues. Some regions are growing more white seedless grapes and producers are paying attention to the quality of grapes, both on-farm and during the cold-chain process. Exports of South African grapes and wine to China are on an upward trend. The imposition in 2020 of prohibitive tariffs on Australian imports by China helped to boost that trend. Credit: CWG Both wine and grape production are supported by the Western Cape Department of Agriculture which offers technology, research and development, agricultural training and analytical services at plant pathology and water and soil laboratories. Wine The wine and brandy industry has set about creating a new strategic framework in response to the various economic and geopolitical shocks. With wine tourism disappearing during Covid-19 lockdowns and input costs rising, the industry has chosen to strategise for a more sustainable future. Led by Vinpro, the wine industry organisation which represents South African wine grape producers, wineries and wine-related businesses, a new strategic framework, the Wine Industry Strategic Exercise (WISE2025), and the Agricultural and the Agro-Processing Master Plan (AAMP) have been created. For some time, South African winemakers have been aiming for better quality instead of WESTERN CAPE BUSINESS 2023 24

Avant-Garde SA_0218633165 FROM OUR TABLE TO YOURS CREATING A PROGRESSIVE, EQUITABLE AND SUSTAINABLE TABLE GRAPE INDUSTRY TABLE GRAPES OF OUTSTANDING QUALITY AND TASTE, WHICH ARE RESPONSIBLY GROWN IN SOUTH AFRICA TO MEET THE HIGHEST GLOBAL STANDARDS, START THE JOURNEY FROM THE FOOT OF TABLE MOUNTAIN TO REACH MARKETS AND TABLES AROUND THE WORLD. Assisting producers to retain, grow and optimise markets is the most important function of the South African Table Grape Industry (SATI), an enabling grower association. SATI represents growers on key government and industry initiatives aimed at creating more opportunities from ownership to accessing new markets in a sustainable way. SATI assists growers with industry information, transformation, research, technology and technical transfer, as well as training and education with the objective to establish South Africa as the Preferred Country of Origin for the world’s best tasting grapes. THE NEXT TIME YOU HAVE GRAPES, MAKE SURE THEY COME FROM OUR TABLE! 63 Main Road, Paarl | P.O Box 2932, Paarl 7620 +27 21 863 0366 info@satgi.co.za | satgi.co.za linkedin.com/company/satgi @sati_sa

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