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South Africa: the wine industry on its knees as lockdown set to ease

Two years ago, South Africa’s first black female winemaker Ntsiki Biyela watched anxiously as the worst drought in a century scorched vineyard across Western Cape.


After surviving that, Biyela’s small business Aslina Wines recovered and was poised for growth this year - until the pandemic outbreak, threatening a bitter harvest as domestic and export sales tanked during nine weeks of lockdown.

Winemaker Ntsiki Biyela tastes a sample of her Aslina wine range, during a lockdown aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) near Stellenbosch, South Africa. Image credit Reuters, Mike Hutchings

“We are 30% down in terms of exports, but also (local) sales we are down,” she said to the media at the cellars of Delheim wine estate in Stellenbosch, where Biyela makes and bottles her own red and white wines.


“I am worried that we are not going to grow...but as long as we can survive for the time being,” she said. “Everyone is struggling to survive.”


Aslina’s woes reflect a broader struggle in one of the world’s top ten wine producers. According to the statistics of the domestic industry body Vinpro, it was unlikely to make up the nearly 3 billion rands ($172 million) in direct revenue lost during the lockdown, with export losses alone amounting to 200 million rands a week.


As well as choking exports, South Africa’s lockdown, one of the toughest worldwide, includes a local ban on the sale of alcohol, even though under looser restrictions announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa, booze will be sold for home consumption at certain times from next week.


Biyela is one of an increasing number of black entrepreneurs breaking into an industry traditionally seen as the sanctuary of wealthy white landowners who have thrived since South Africa produced its first wine in 1659.

Image credit Reuters

Aslina Wines, named after Biyela’s late grandmother who helped raise her in the rural village of KwaVuthela on the east coast, was founded in 2016 and sells around 36,000 bottles a year. The main exports go to the United States, Japan and the Netherlands.


Yet, the first export since lockdown started in late March, and it is scheduled to leave from Cape Town to the United States on June 1, Biyela said, but demand is down and instead of the usual container load “they are only taking about five pallets which is like half”.


Rico Basson, managing director at Vinpro, admitted: “We estimate that around 80 wineries, with almost 350 producers, could be out of business...that equates to some 15 to 20% of the sector.”


Across the entire liquor industry in Africa’s most industrialised economy -which includes craft brewers- job losses mounted at 117,600, he affirmed.


Nonetheless, it is unclear if opening up after two months of zero revenue will be enough to save the year revenues.


Indeed, “The implications are already irreversible,” Basson concluded.

Image credit Shutterstock

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