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    Home » Clover Sounds Alarm over Milk Trade Crisis
    AGRICULTURE

    Clover Sounds Alarm over Milk Trade Crisis

    February 20, 2026
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    John Steenhuisen, Minister of Agriculture of South Africa
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    South Africa’s dairy industry is facing mounting pressure as inconsistent foot-and-mouth disease control measures disrupt exports and raise concerns over food security. Clover has warned that uneven provincial enforcement and regulatory overlap are undermining dairy producers despite compliance with national and international safety standards.

    The company argues that disease eradication efforts are being conflated with dairy processing protocols, creating export bottlenecks. While FMD primarily affects cloven-hoofed animals and not processed dairy products, exporters report delays linked to veterinary attestations and permit inconsistencies. This is occurring at a time when agriculture remains a critical contributor to South Africa’s trade balance, with the sector generating more than R200 billion in export revenue annually, according to the Department of Agriculture.

    Clover maintains that ultra-high-temperature milk complies with international trade standards and does not require additional FMD-related certification under World Organisation for Animal Health guidelines. However, domestic procedures are reportedly imposing additional requirements, complicating access to foreign markets. The company contends that these measures exceed internationally accepted norms, contributing to regulatory deadlock.

    Further tension centres on the classification of vaccinated livestock. Industry representatives argue that milk from vaccinated herds is being treated as if it originates from infected animals, broadening restrictions without a scientific basis. This, they say, increases compliance costs and disrupts the dairy value chain from farm collection to processing.

    The broader economic implications are significant. South Africa’s dairy industry supports thousands of jobs across farming, logistics and manufacturing. According to data from the Milk Producers’ Organisation, the country produces roughly 3.4 billion litres of milk annually, with processed dairy exports forming an important revenue stream in regional and global markets. Prolonged export disruptions could result in lower milk intake, financial strain on producers and reduced investment in herd development.

    The call from industry leaders is for national alignment of minimum standards, clearer differentiation between infected and vaccinated milk, and streamlined export certification. Analysts note that regulatory uncertainty can deter foreign buyers, particularly in competitive markets where compliance timelines are tightly managed.

    South Africa has previously faced agricultural export interruptions linked to animal disease outbreaks, affecting beef and other livestock products. The current dispute highlights the balance policymakers must strike between disease containment and trade continuity. Without clearer coordination across provinces and alignment with global benchmarks, stakeholders warn that the sector could face avoidable economic losses at a time when agricultural resilience remains central to rural livelihoods and national food stability.

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