1 / 29

FOREST SECTOR CHARTER COUNCIL

FOREST SECTOR CHARTER COUNCIL. B-BBEE Progress Report to the Portfolio Committee of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 23 JUNE 2015 Mr Simangaliso Mkhwanazi (Executive Director). PRESENTATION OUTLINE. Purpose Forest Sector Profile Forest Sector Charter Forest Sector Charter Council

brittonm
Download Presentation

FOREST SECTOR CHARTER COUNCIL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FOREST SECTOR CHARTER COUNCIL B-BBEE Progress Report to the Portfolio Committee of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 23 JUNE 2015 Mr Simangaliso Mkhwanazi (Executive Director)

  2. PRESENTATION OUTLINE • Purpose • Forest Sector Profile • Forest Sector Charter • Forest Sector Charter Council • B-BBEE Transformation Status report • Medium & Large Enterprises (MLE) analysis • Qualifying & Small Enterprises (QSE) analysis • Exempted Micro Enterprises (EME) analysis • Challenges • Conclusion

  3. PURPOSE • The presentation provides information on the progress and performance towards the implementation of B-BBEE (Broad based Black Economic Empowerment) in the Forestry sector and related industries. • The presentation also provides challenges in the implementation of B-BBEE in the Forestry sector and related industries.

  4. Forest Sector Profile • Uses 1% of total land (1 273 357ha) • Employs about 146 000 in sawmilling, pulp & paper, timber boards, mining timber etc., (22.5% employment in Agriculture) • Provides about 850 000 livelihood support • Contributes 1% National GDP & 7.7% of manufacturing GDP • Production mainly on pulp & paper and sawmilling products • Derives 70%of revenue from exports (Reference: FSA Facts 2011/12)

  5. Forest Sector Charter • Originates from the B-BBEE Act, No 53 of 2003 (now Amendment Act) • Launched in 2005, established a Steering Committee • 2005-2008 draft Charter developed by working groups & Steering Committee • FB-BBEE draft Charter gazetted for public comments in May 2008 • Published as a Sector Code in June 2009 • Revised in 2014, still awaiting gazetting

  6. Forest Sector Charter (Continuation) • Main objective: “To extend the economic opportunities and benefits of the Forest Sector to the previously disadvantaged black groups”. • Scope of application • Growers • Contracting • Fibre • Sawmilling • Pole & • Charcoal

  7. Forest Sector Charter Council (FSCC) • FSCC known as “Council”, launched in May 2008 & operating as a section 21 Company. • Main responsibilities: - To facilitate, oversee, encourage implementation of Charter - To monitor & report on the Charter Undertakings - To monitor & report on the Transformation Status - To publicize the Charter & • Participates in Government, Industry & Council forums & member of the Joint Technical Team (Dti initiative)

  8. Forest Sector Charter Council (Continuation) • 3 strategic sessions, highlighting strategic objectives • Foresight exercise in 2011 to craft preferred future for the sector • 4 Quarterly meetings on a annual basis. • Reporting: • The President’s B-BBEE Advisory Council, • Minister of Trade & Industry & • Minister of Agriculture, Forestry & Fisheries. • Composition – 20 Board members & an Independent Chairperson

  9. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • B-BBEE Status report: An annual report on scorecard implementation & performance • Objective: Assess the status of transformation in the Forest sector • Scorecard seven (7) elements • Ownership (O) • Management Control (MC) • Employment Equity (EE) • Skills Development (SD) • Preferential procurement (PP) • Enterprise Development (ED) • Socio-economic Development (SED)

  10. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • Measured entities are: • Medium & Large Enterprises (MLE,˃ R35M turnover), • Qualifying Small Enterprises (QSE, R5M-R35M turnover), & • Exempted Micro Enterprises (EME˂ R5M) • Medium and Large enterprises (MLE) scored on 7 elements • Qualifying Small Enterprises (QSE) scored on any 4 element • Exempted Micro Enterprises (EME) automatically level 4 status (level three if compliance with Codes of Good conduct) • Fifth (5th) Transformation status report completed

  11. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • Certificates with underlying information collected • Information gathered analysed • Analysis based on size of enterprise • Medium & Large Enterprises (MLE,˃ R35M turnover), • Qualifying Small Enterprises (QSE, R5M-R35M turnover), & • Exempted Micro Enterprises (EME˂ R5M) • Further Sub-sector analysis: • Results compared to KPMG report (NB:KPMG report- an annual survey which aims to provide a tool to benchmark B-BBEE implementation progress)

  12. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Ownership

  13. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Management Control

  14. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Employment Equity

  15. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Skills Development

  16. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Preferential Procurement

  17. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Enterprise Development

  18. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • MLE analysis: Socio-Economic Development

  19. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • QSE analysis: Ownership

  20. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • QSE analysis: Management Control & Employment Equity

  21. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • QSE analysis: Skills Development & Preferential Procurement

  22. B-BBEE Status of Transformation • QSE analysis: Enterprise Development & Socio- economic Development

  23. B-BBEE Status of Transformation

  24. B-BBEE Transformation Status • Sector achieved a level four (4, 66.5 points ) status, (a level increase from previous year, level 5) • Four of the seven scorecard elements recorded an improvement, Ownership (61%), Employment Equity (40%), Skills Development ( 51%) & Enterprise Development (98%) • Low performance on the Ownership element’s designated groups • Management Control & Employment Equity struggle to move beyond 50% of target

  25. B-BBEE Transformation Status • Black women representation as directors and executives limited • Skills Development performance above KPMG target but still needs to improve • Consistent & excellent performance in Enterprise development (98%), Preferential Procurement (77%) & Socio- Economic Development (156%) • QSE’s achieved 80%+ of target, except in Skills Development • QSE’s maintained level 3 status • EME’s maintained level 4 status (65% of EME white managed)

  26. B-BBEE Transformation Status Challenges • Verification using generic scorecard - matter to be addressed through Joint Technical Committee- Dti and New Codes,all enterprises falling within a sector that has sector code must be verified under Sector Code • Inaccurate database - addressed through organised sub sector associations and updating database • Level of awareness- an intensified awareness programme to be undertaken • Some entities without B-BBEE certificates - addressed in the new Codes, all enterprises falling within a sector that has sector code must be verified under a Sector Code

  27. Conclusion • Reporting entities numbers improved from 26 in 2010 to 77 in 2014 • Average performance in Ownership • Sector performing well in Enterprise development, Socio-economic Development and Preferential Procurement (though sector specific guidelines need to be developed) • More improvement required in Employment Equity & Management Control

  28. Conclusion (Continuation) • More efforts to be channelled on under represented sub sectors, Qualifying Small Enterprises & Exempted Micro Enterprises (Better enforcement measures) • Delivery on industry and government undertakings necessary to enhance transformation in Forest Sector • Mandate of Council to be strengthen (such as actual visits to enterprises, monitoring and audits)

  29. THANK YOU

More Related