Title: Service Level Agreement
1 AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCILPresentation to
Parliament11 October 2007Presented By Chief
Executive Officer Dr Shadrack Moephuli
2ARC DELEGATION
- Ms. Jean Davidson Council Chair
- Mr. Elton Bosch Council Deputy Chair
- Mr. Thabiso Mudau Stakeholder relations
3MANDATE OF THE ARC
- OBJECTIVE To promote agriculture and the
industry in order to contribute to the
improvement of the quality of life of the people
of RSA - THROUGH
- Conduct research
- Develop technology
- Transfer technology that promotes agriculture and
industry.
4 SPECIFIC ARC GOALS IN SUPPORT OF NATIONAL
PRIORITIES
- The sustainable use of the natural resource base
and the environment - The competitiveness of the South African
agricultural sector - Increased participation, equity and access to the
sector (by resource-poor farmers) - Support for the production of high quality, safe
food, and - Generating knowledge for an informed society
5ARCS CONTRIBUTION TO NATIONAL INITIATIVES
- The ARC plays an important role in the following
- Comprehensive Agricultural Support Programme
(CASP), - Integrated Food Security and Nutrition Programme
(IFSNP), Poverty Alleviation, - Land Reform for Agricultural Development (LRAD),
- Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative of South
Africa (ASGISA), - Government regulatory responsibilities, (eg
sanitary and phytosanitary controls) - Ensuring a sustainable use of limited natural
resources (soil, water, and agro-biodiversity)
6Agricultural Research Council Research Farms,
institutes Offices
34
30
52
Potgietersrus
53-62
29
21-22
65
33
8
38-42
Johannesburg
80
50-51
28
Vryburg
75-78
25
26-27
17-18
5
24
16
Upington
37
45-48
Bloemfontein
Durban
6-7
32
35-36
Middelburg
72-73
9
2
1
20
43-44
79
East London
23
66-71
31
10
74
12-15
81
3
11
64
Cape Town
83
49
4
19
7ARCS CONTRIBUTION TO THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
- Optimum value addition on primary agriculture
products to the agricultural value chain - Sustainable use of natural resources
- Research on climate change
- Elimination of diseases and pests that undermine
agricultural production - Effective entry point control of imported
weeds, pests diseases - Development and growth of regional and
international markets for agricultural products - Commitment to regional initiatives eg NEPAD SADC
8- ARCS ACHIEVEMENTS IN DELIVERING ON ITS MANDATE
9Sugar Dry Bean
- The speckled sugar dry bean cultivar Sederberg
was bred at ARC-GCI to improve the resistance of
dry bean cultivars to fungal diseases. - Sederberg is resistant to the fungal diseases
rust and angular leaf spot and is resistant to
bean common mosaic virus (BCMV). - It is high yielding and widely adapted especially
in the high rainfall areas
where fungal
diseases
are a problem. - ARC released Sederberg, a red speckled
- sugarbean (Type II growth habit) with rust
- (UR-11 and UR-13), ALS and Bean Common
- Mosiac Virus resistance.
10PRODUCTION GUIDELINES
- Another focus on competitiveness is improved
production practices that lower production costs,
increase profitability and add value to products
9000 copies of Maize Information Guide (MIG
2006) containing technical information were
printed and mailed to 7000 producers. A total of
1000 copies were also supplied to the Small-Scale
farmer section of Grain SA for use in their study
groups. - Two Production guidelines, namely Guidelines for
the Production of small grains in the Summer
Rainfall Region and Guidelines for the
Production of small grains in the Winter Rainfall
Region were made available during April 2006 to
6500 producers, extension officers and
scientists. These production guides contain
technical information and updated improved
technologies such as effective growth regulators,
herbicide resistance, seeding density, pest and
disease control as well as information on
explained cultivars.
11MAIZE
- A quality protein maize (QPM) cultivar SAM1109
has been developed and breeder seed produced for
seed companies, 420 tons of certified maize seed
of open-pollinated cultivars were produced for
resource poor and developing farmers, primarily
in Limpopo, Mpumalanga and the Eastern Cape
provinces, in partnerships with a small seed
company.
12Food Security, Nutrition and Health
- Vitamin A deficiency 33
- Model for household food production nutrition
education, cultivation growth monitoring
programm - MRC ARC International Collaboration
- Food based approach to alleviate vitamin A
deficiency - Introduction of orange fleshed sweet potato,
other vit. A rich vegetables carrots, swiss
chard, butternut etc. - Biofortification
- Training in 6 provinces E. Cape, Free State,
Limpopo, Gauteng and Mpumalanga 200 school
garden projects
13CULTIVATION OF GRAPES
- Establishment of vineyard
- Low cost soil preparation
- Planting of cuttings from vines known for mass
grape production - Production of Villard blanc 39 tons per Hectare
- Eksteenskuil producers
14COMPETITIVENESS MARKET ACCESS
- 45 SA drief fruit industry depends on nectarines
- New nectarine cultivars
- Yellow skin world first
- Plant Breeders Rights
- Red/yellow skin good for poor handling and
storage environments - Fruit dont lose firmness as rapidly easier to
harvest and market over a longer time
15BIOCONTROL
- Mango scale is a major pest.
- In 1996 a parasitoid was imported from Thailand,
mass-reared at the ARC in Nelspruit, released in
many mango producing areas of Mpumalanga and
Limpopo for the biological control of mango
scale. - In 2006, another major survey was conducted in
most mango producing areas ranging from Mussina
in the north of Limpopo to Port Edward in the
south of KZN to determine the current status of
the imported biocontrol agent. The parasitoid was
recovered from all sites, even in areas such as
Tshipise and Thohoyandou in Limpopo and the
entire KwaZulu/Natal, where it had never been
released. - This confirms the successful establishment and
remarkable distribution of the parasitoid in all
mango producing areas in South Africa.
- Impact of biological control enables most mango
producers to rely on natural control, using an
estimated 40 less toxic insecticides.
16ANIMAL PRODUCTION
- PUTUVELD model GIS prediction for production
potential and climate risk for grasslands - Production traits for Dairy Cattle 1000 Farmers
benefitted. - Breeding index for feedlot profitability
completed, used in 9 provinces and reached /-
1000 farmers. - Established rangeland monitoring programme with
DoA. - Technology to control and manage build up of
lactic acid in ruminants feedlot animal can eat
more and produce more milk, improved weight gains
etc. - LidcatTM technology for positive identification
of livestock stock theft deterrent - Performance tests on livestock owned by communal
farmers raised market prices of beef animals
from black farmers
17ANIMAL DISEASES
- Developed and validated a test for detection of
infection of cattle with Brucella abortus
Brucella Rapid Test (BRT) - Easy to use and interpret
- Combined with vaccination strategy to protect
uninfected female animals - Developed an improved test for Rift Valley Fever
that uses a recombinant protein instead of the
whole virus. Currently validating the test and
will commercialize if successful. - Classical swine fever (CSF) surveillance is
ongoing and in the affected province of the
Eastern Cape, in excess of 12,998 samples have
been tested. - Ongoing surveillance of transboundary animal
disease (e.g. Foot and Mouth African swine
fever). - Training on serological diagnosis of avian
influenza to enhance SADC country participants
abilities for surveillance of AI. - Continued the Pesticide Residue Monitoring
programme
18The Public Support Services Division
- Poor farming practices bad crop rotation
resulted in accumulation of soil borne plant
pathogens impact has been diminishing crop
yields among commercial and small scale farmers
in KZN. - Early warning forecast of locust outbreak
information to DoA through the ICOSAMP
(Information Core for Southern African Migrant
Pests) ARC coordinates and releases to SADC
Countries. - Herbicide trials on pompom weed indicate a
growing alien invasive, particularly in Gauteng.
- Identified 5 potential biological control agents
for an emerging weed (balloon vine) during a
field survey in Argentina. - Identified plant feeding mites on imported fruit
tree cuttings with pest species not present in
RSA. Prevented inadvertent importation of new
alien invasive species and potential pests. - Developed land suitability maps for 6 biofuel
crops (sunflower, soya bean, maize, grain
sorghum, sugar cane and sugar beet).
19The Public Support Services Division (cont.)
- Utilized coarse resolution satellite imagery
(used for drought monitoring and crop estimation)
to develop products from data retrieved from the
geostationary MSG (Meteosat Second Generation)
satellite. - National asset register comprised of a collection
of over 13 000 maps land suitability - The National Collections of insects, arachnids,
nematodes and fungi of the ARC are among the most
important and comprehensive biological and
taxonomic reference resources of their kind in
Africa. - Spiders as biological control agents
20PARTNERSHIPS RESEARCH
- In Partnership with the International Centre for
Development Oriented Research in Agriculture
(ICRA), ARC has conducted 16 field studies with
provinces on various priority research issues
identified by provinces. The aim of the studies
was (i) to enhance inter-disciplinary teamwork
among researchers, (ii) link research and
extension in responding to farmer's priorities,
(iii) empower farmers to identify and elaborate
on their research needs and enable farmers to
contribute their own knowledge into the research
agenda, and (iv) provide insight for researchers
to design responsive interventions.
Participatory Research with Farmers
21 INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS
- Commercialisation of Indigenous plants
- Devils Claw Project Two hundred
- farmers (200) are participating in the
- production and processing of Devils Claw
- indigenous medical plant in Ganyesa, North
- West Province in partnership with NW
- Department of Agriculture, Bophirima
- Municipality, and Traditional Leaders. ARC
- Skills transferred to farmers include artificial
- propagation, grading weighing, packaging ,as
- well as business management and marketing
- of the processed product. Commercialisation of
- This ARC Research Product resulted in the
- creation of a Public Company owned and
- operated by beneficiaries Sekamo
- Pharmaceuticals cc for Devils Claw.
Devils claw spiny fruit showcasing claw-like
structures
22BIOFUELS/SMME DEVELOPMENT
- Oil Seed Crop Production for
- Biofuels
- Oil Seed Crop Farmers In partnership with
Limpopo Department of Agriculture, 35 farmers in
Limpopo, were trained on production technologies,
business skills and activities that will enable
them to become sustainable SMMEs linked to
Biodiesel Production for the Biofuels industry.
Farmers participating in practical soil
preparations at the Farmer Development Centre
in Tompi Seleka
23Human Resources Overview
- The ARC Invested 3 of our labour cost (including
statutory skills-levy contributions) in human
resource development. A large portion of this
was invested in the Professional Development
Programme and the ARC Transformational Capacity
Building Programme on the formal and informal
training of core staff. The bulk of the budget
went to skills development to support employment
equity. - The Professional Development Programme had 60
candidates, 26 males and 34 females. Of the 60
candidates, two completed their PhD studies and
eight completed MSc degrees. - Continued with the capacity building programme
which was launched in April 2005. The purpose of
the programme is to create a pool of young
scientists from the previously disadvantaged
groups. During the period under review the
programme had 126 candidates.
24QUALITY OF SCIENTIFIC CAPACITY
Qualifications of Staff Number of Total Staff (2698) Research Staff (923)
Research staff with PhD degrees 170 6.30 18.40
Research staff with masters degree 260 9.60 28.20
Professional Engineers Veterinarians 20 0.70 2.20
Staff enrolled for Masters/PhD degrees 118 4.40 12.80
Staff enrolled for Engineering/Veterinary degrees 4 0.10 0.40
Total Staff 2,698
25DEVELOPMENT OF SCIENTIFIC CAPACITY
Study Programme Male Female Total
PhD 12 3 15
MSc 32 35 67
BSc (Hons) 4 10 14
BTech 7 10 17
BAgric 2 3 5
NDipl 1 5 6
Adv Dipl 1 1 2
TOTAL 59 67 126
26MANAGING OUR FINANCES
27AUDITOR GENERALS REPORT AUDIT COMMITTEE
REPORT FOR 2005/06
28AUDIT QUALIFICATION
- Non-compliance with IAS 16 Property,
- Plant and Equipment
- -The useful lives and residual values of
property, plan - and equipment were not reviewed in the current
period - as required by IAS16 Property, Plant and
Equipment - Existence of Accounts Receivable
- The receivables balance includes an amount of
R49,7 million which the entity claims is due to
it in respect of VAT on the Parliamentary grant
that is recoverable from the transferring agent.
At the date of this report, the entity had not
received any confirmation from the transferring
agent in respect of the acceptance of this
liability.
29AUDIT EMPHASIS OF MATTER
- Auditor-General raised Emphasis of matter items
- Weaknesses in internal control
- Implementation of Supply Chain Management
- Changes to financial statements
- Performance information
- WHATS THE OUTCOME FOR 2006/07?
30Matters emphasised in the Auditor-General report 1999 - 2000 2000 - 2001 2001 - 2002 2002 - 2003 2003 - 2004 2004 - 2005 2005 - 2006 2006 - 2007
Legislative compliance x x - x x x - -
Forensic investigations x - - - - - - -
Internal control x x x - - x x -
Provision for post-retirement medical aid benefits x x - - - - - -
Pension fund contributions x - - - - - - -
Transfer of land and buildings from the state x x - - - - - -
Going concern x x x - - - - -
Depreciation and impairment of land and buildings - x - - - x -
Performance information - - x x x - x -
Implementation of SCM - - - - - - x -
Changes to financial statements - - - - - - x -
Financial statements - unqualified opinion yes yes yes yes yes yes no yes
31Summary of Financial performance for nine years
AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW NINE YEAR REVIEW
2006/07 2005/06 2004/05 2003/04 2002/03 2001/02 2000/01 1999/00 1998/9
R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000 R '000
INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT INCOME STATEMENT
Parliamentary Grant 434,175 457,186 320,708 276,140 267,552 267,683 276,278 274,519 286,410
External Income 259,798 196,966 224,514 212,252 239,513 261,036 167,915 157,909 129,716
Total Expenditure 697,259 652,931 552,177 495,984 473,672 496,521 450,333 440,692 474,862
Total Remuneration Cost 415,974 395,965 315,853 284,228 263,630 289,804 284,589 285,397 295,300
Other Expenditure 281,285 261,089 236,324 211,756 210,042 266,556 165,744 155,295 179,562
Investment Income 11,693 11,183 12,761 13,955 9,568 6,293 6,173 8,311 13,823
Net Surplus\(Deficit) 8,955 12,910 6,069 6,363 36,893 (21,347) 33 47 (44,913)
BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET BALANCE SHEET
Property, plant and equipment 521,596 396,961 380,999 375,683 385,441 395,214 544,452 545,236 547,572
Other Assets 2,231 1,236 850 845 183 188 185 131 96
Current assets (excluding cash) 79,629 128,735 73,394 67,475 75,407 65,857 66,264 47,130 35,848
Cash resources (net of bank overdraft) 96,656 152,823 152,412 102,679 80,512 65,541 20,157 25,683 57,650
Total Assets 700,112 679,755 607,655 546,682 541,543 526,800 631,058 618,180 641,166
32SEVEN YEAR REVIEW GRAPH
33(No Transcript)
34NEW DIRECTION
- Scientific capacity excellence
- Broadening diversity skills base
- Improving internal systems (HR, Financial risk
management policies) - Communicating research outputs visibility,
relations with user groups - Organizational structure performance
- Competitiveness for research funds
- Collaboration adjunct posts, students
- Capital Expenditure infrastructure
-
35CONCLUSION
- The year under review has been one of many
changes in the ARC, particularly in leadership. - Responding to compliance requirements has brought
challenges on Human Resource Management and the
need for new policies and systems. - Improvements in performance continue at the
forefront of the ARC researchers and other
personnel. - The Council and employees of the ARC wish to
thank the Honourable Minister, Ms. Lulu Xingwana
for her leadership and support. - We also thank the support and leadership of the
Agriculture and Land Affairs Portfolio Committee.
- THANK YOU!