KarooPrime Capretto — Market Overview: Global & South Africa

The global goat-meat market and the halaal export premium, and the South African goat sector, the formalisation gap and the price environment.

KarooPrime Capretto Business PlanSection 3 › Market Overview: Global & South Africa

Section 3 · Business Plan

Market Overview: Global & South Africa

The global goat-meat market and the halaal export premium, and the South African goat sector, the formalisation gap and the price environment.

3.1 Global goat meat market

Goat meat is a globally significant protein consumed in more than 110
countries. Industry estimates place the global goat meat market at
roughly USD 248 billion in 2025, growing at a compound annual rate of
approximately 2.8% to reach an estimated USD 317 billion by 2035.
Worldwide production exceeded 6 million tonnes in 2024, with the
Asia-Pacific region contributing close to two-thirds of output. China,
India and Pakistan together account for over 60% of both global
production and consumption.

Demand-side dynamics are favourable. Goat meat consumption rose
roughly 18% between 2020 and 2024, supported by rising consumer
preference for lean protein (chevon typically contains less than 3%
fat), population growth in goat-consuming regions, and the expansion of
halaal-certified processing capacity, which has grown by more than 20%
in recent years to support export into Islamic markets.

Figure 2
Figure 2. Global goat meat market value and forecast, 2024–2034 (USD billion). Source: industry market research; CAGR ~2.8%.

3.1.1 The halaal export premium

A critical driver for South African exporters is the global halaal
meat market, valued at over USD 0.9 trillion in 2024 and projected by
several research houses to approach USD 1.5–1.8 trillion by the
early-to-mid 2030s. The Middle East and Africa region is among the
fastest-growing, supported by large public investments in food security
— including Saudi Arabia’s multi-billion-dollar livestock initiatives —
and rising halaal tourism. Goat and mutton are culturally preferred
proteins across the GCC, creating durable demand pull for accredited
suppliers.

3.2 The South African goat sector

South Africa’s national goat herd is estimated at approximately 7.8
million animals, comprising indigenous veld goats, Boer goats, Savannas,
Kalahari Reds and Angoras. Of these, roughly 1.8 million are categorised
as commercial, with the balance of around 6.0 million held by
smallholders, subsistence farmers and rural households, predominantly in
the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Limpopo. South Africa also leads the
world in mohair production, supplying roughly three-quarters of premium
Angora fibre, but its goat meat and dairy sub-sectors remain largely
informal and underdeveloped.

Figure 3
Figure 3. Composition of the South African national goat herd (~7.8 million head). Source: BFAP, NAMC, DALRRD value-chain profile.

3.2.1 The formalisation gap

The defining feature of the domestic sector is the gulf between herd
size and formal throughput. The BFAP Baseline 2025 report estimates that
more than three million goats are slaughtered annually in the informal
market for household consumption and traditional, religious and
ceremonial purposes. Industry consensus is that only about 0.5% of
slaughter passes through registered abattoirs — on the order of 15,000
animals a year. Formal commercial slaughter recorded by industry levy
bodies rose from just over 1,100 head in 2022/23 to roughly 11,600 head
in 2023/24, indicating a small but rapidly growing formal channel.

Figure 4
Figure 4. The formalisation gap: informal versus formal goat slaughter in South Africa (log scale). Source: BFAP Baseline 2025; RMIS.

This gap is the Company’s core opportunity. Each animal redirected
from informal trade into KarooPrime Capretto’s accredited chain gains
grading, traceability, cold-chain integrity and access to premium and
export pricing — value that is simply unavailable in the informal
market.

3.2.2 Price environment

Formal-sector auction data for 2025 indicates live goat prices
ranging from approximately R47.18 to R67.40 per kilogram depending on
age and gender, on animals weighing 23–48 kg — translating to roughly
R1,559 to R2,265 per animal. Premium breeding stock commands far higher
prices, with stud Boer goat rams averaging tens of thousands of Rand at
championship auctions and exceptional animals reaching hundreds of
thousands. The Company’s procurement model targets the commercial
slaughter and finishing segment, where disciplined buying and feedlot
value-addition generate the margin.

Indicator Value Source / note
National goat herd ~7.8 million head BFAP / NAMC / DALRRD
Commercial share of herd ~1.8 million head DALRRD value-chain profile
Informal annual slaughter >3.0 million head BFAP Baseline 2025
Formal slaughter share ~0.5% Industry consensus / RMIS
Formal commercial slaughter 2023/24 ~11,600 head Agri Levy Services
Live price range (2025) R47–R67 / kg AMT auction data
Price per animal (2025) R1,559–R2,265 AMT auction data
Goat vs mutton price premium ~+40% / kg Industry estimate

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