Tongaat Hulett’s three South African sugar mills – Maidstone, Amatikulu, and Felixton – have emerged as the country’s top performers in sugar recovery this season, marking a dramatic turnaround for the once-struggling agribusiness. The achievement follows a R1.45 billion capital injection over three years, funded by the Industrial Development Corporation, which addressed years of neglected infrastructure. Upgrades to milling equipment, refinery operations, and animal feed plants have boosted efficiency, with growers and industry benchmarks confirming the improvements. CEO Gavin Dalgleish credits the revival to strategic investments in both machinery and workforce training, shifting the company’s focus from reactive maintenance to sustainable performance gains.
The financial lifeline also enabled Tongaat to recruit specialised technical staff and upskill employees, fostering a culture of operational excellence. Independent industry data now ranks its mills above national benchmarks, particularly in recoverable value (measuring sugar and molasses extraction) and crystal recovery efficiency (sucrose crystallisation rates). Growers attending recent engagement sessions praised the consistency of mill operations, emphasising that reliable performance outweighs short-term pricing incentives. Pratish Sharma, a senior Maidstone grower, noted the mill’s best output in a decade, while local SA Canegrowers representative Nkosinathi Msweli predicted it would become the “mill of choice” for the industry.
Tongaat’s business rescue process, initiated in October 2022, is nearing completion under new ownership by Vision Investments. The finalisation of asset sales is imminent, with Vision having settled payments to lenders, securing claims and collateral. Despite this progress, challenges persist, including dwindling sugarcane supplies and competition from cheap imports due to delayed tariff adjustments. Dalgleish stressed the need for industry-wide collaboration to stabilise cane production and safeguard local markets against dumped sugar, which threatens the sector’s R9.3 billion GDP contribution and 2,600 jobs.
Looking ahead, Tongaat aims to consolidate its recovery by expanding grower partnerships and advocating for protective trade policies. The company’s resurgence offers a blueprint for industrial rehabilitation, proving that targeted capital expenditure and stakeholder collaboration can revive even the most distressed enterprises. With mills now operating at peak efficiency, Tongaat is poised to reclaim its status as a linchpin of South Africa’s agricultural economy – provided it can navigate the headwinds of global trade dynamics and local supply constraints.

