Johannesburg: South Africa’s livestock farmers are preparing for more losses after the driest year on record already cut herds and as the hemisphere’s winter nears, fuelling food prices that are already climbing at the fastest pace in 18 months.

Scarce grazing and drought-stricken farmers’ inability to buy animal feed may trigger a second livestock sell-off during winter after similar conditions caused an oversupply during most of the summer months, Gerhard Schutte, the chief executive officer of South Africa’s Red Meat Producers Organisation, said by phone on Monday.

A supply shortage is likely to occur from September and would be exacerbated should good rainfall occur from that period as farmers retain animals to rebuild their herds, Schutte said.

“If the new season is a good rainy season, prices will start going crazy,” Lardus van Zyl, chairman of the meat producers’ body, said by phone. “Not only will the abattoirs be looking for animals, but so will farmers who seek proper breeding stock.”

The warning on meat prices comes as South Africa last year had the least rainfall since records started in 1904. The drought more than doubled corn prices and drove food inflation to 8.8 per cent in February, the highest since August 2014. Meat-price growth was more subdued at 5.5 per cent in the same period due to the sell-off in animals.

Under normal conditions, South Africa’s cattle herd is estimated at 13.6 million animals, 7.9 million of which are kept by commercial producers and the rest by subsistence farmers, according to Schutte. The sheep herd counts 24.6 million animals while goats number an estimated 5.6 million, he said.

Loss numbers

So far, commercial farmers’ stocks have been depleted by an estimated 5 per cent due to the drought while subsistence owners have experienced losses of about 10 per cent on average, he said.

Rebuilding herds can take three to four years, a process that will weigh on supply to abattoirs, Omri van Zyl, the CEO of farmers’ lobby group AGRI SA, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s offices in Johannesburg.

“We need a subsidy for herd-rebuilding purposes,” Van Zyl said. “The national herd has shrunk. There’s only so much you can do to rebuild it and that’s under normal climatic conditions.”

Farmers would require funding assistance of 6 billion rand (Dh1.5 billion) to 20 billion rand over three years due to losses suffered because of the drought, AGRI Sa’s Van Zyl said. Livestock farmers alone require about 4 billion rand, he said.

“To curb food-price inflation, we’re going to have to put the guys in a position where they were last year, before the drought,” Van Zyl said.

Consumers are buying fewer meat products due to rising costs, Pierre Spies, managing director of agribusiness GWK Ltd., told reporters in Kimberley in the Northern Cape province.

“We saw a spike in meat prices in February after the thinning out of the national herd had ended in January and then they corrected back down,” Spies said. “We are still expecting prices to rise again.”