The South African government has moved to prevent the liquidation of Tongaat Hulett, signalling direct intervention to stabilise the embattled sugar producer as it faces mounting financial and market pressures. Trade, Industry and Competition Minister Parks Tau said the department believes the company can be restructured without entering liquidation and will oppose any move to wind it down.
Tongaat’s difficulties have intensified amid a surge of low-cost sugar imports, estimated at 163,000 tonnes, which have weighed on local prices and margins. The company’s business rescue practitioners recently approached the KwaZulu-Natal High Court for provisional liquidation after a proposed sale of its South African operations to Vision Sugar lapsed when funding negotiations with the Industrial Development Corporation failed to conclude.
Tau has initiated steps to amend the constitution of the South African Sugar Association to allow it to determine domestic sugar requirements, stock levels and export volumes, a move aimed at restoring balance to the local market. The government is engaging the IDC, labour unions, growers, financiers and investors to secure a viable solution that preserves operations and protects jobs.
Industry bodies have stressed the broader economic implications. SA Canegrowers indicated that liquidation would affect far more than a single corporate entity, given the industry’s integration into rural economies. The South African Farmers Development Association noted that around 60% of the country’s 25,653 small-scale sugar farmers operate within Tongaat’s catchment areas, supplying cane to mills in Tongaat, Gingindlovu and Empangeni.
More than one million tonnes of sugarcane for the current season, valued at approximately R845.7 million, are linked to these operations. South Africa’s sugar sector supports tens of thousands of direct and indirect jobs, particularly in KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga, making stability in milling operations critical to rural income streams.
For now, the provisional liquidation filing has been withheld to allow further negotiations. Stakeholders remain focused on securing funding and restructuring agreements that would enable Tongaat to continue operating in some form, amid concerns that failure would deepen strain across the agricultural value chain and rural communities.
