Golden Fields Wheat Farming — Implementation Roadmap
The project will be implemented in five distinct phases over a 60-month period, with each phase building on the operational capabilities and financial performance of the preceding phase. This staged approach manages execution risk, enables learning and adaptation, and aligns capital deployment…
Section 11 · Business Plan
Implementation Roadmap
The project will be implemented in five distinct phases over a 60-month period, with each phase building on the operational capabilities and financial performance of the preceding phase. This staged approach manages execution risk, enables learning and adaptation, and aligns capital deployment…
11.1 Phased Implementation Approach
The project will be implemented in five distinct phases over a 60-month period, with each phase building on the operational capabilities and financial performance of the preceding phase. This staged approach manages execution risk, enables learning and adaptation, and aligns capital deployment with operational readiness.
Phase 1: Foundation (Months 1–12)
The foundation phase encompasses all pre-operational activities required to achieve first planting, including land acquisition and lease agreements for 2,500 hectares; procurement and delivery of core machinery fleet; installation of irrigation infrastructure on 1,500 hectares; recruitment and training of key management and operational staff; establishment of input supply contracts and SAFEX trading accounts; first planting season (May–July Year 1); and first harvest (October–December Year 1). Capital deployment during Phase 1 is estimated at R95 million, representing approximately 68% of total project capital.
Phase 2: Growth (Months 13–24)
The growth phase focuses on scaling production area to 3,000 hectares, constructing the 15,000-tonne grain storage facility, deploying precision agriculture technology across all production fields, establishing SAFEX hedging programme and forward contract relationships, and completing the second planting and harvest cycle. Phase 2 capital deployment is estimated at R25 million, funded through a combination of retained earnings and drawdown of remaining debt facilities.
Phase 3: Expansion (Months 25–36)
Phase 3 extends the operation to 3,500 hectares, develops supply chain partnerships with millers and grain traders, commences third-party grain storage operations, and targets operational break-even at the EBITDA level. This phase marks the transition from growth-oriented capital deployment to operational optimisation and margin improvement.
Phase 4: Optimisation (Months 37–48)
The optimisation phase scales operations to 4,000–5,000 hectares while focusing on yield improvement through agronomic refinement, cost reduction through operational efficiency, and evaluation of forward integration opportunities including a milling feasibility study. The Company is expected to achieve full debt service coverage and commence dividend distributions during this phase.
Phase 5: Maturity (Months 49–60)
At maturity, the Company operates at full capacity of 5,000 hectares with optimised cost structures, established market relationships, and strong free cash flow generation. Key activities include a milling integration decision, SADC export market development, investor reporting and performance review, and evaluation of exit or recapitalisation alternatives.
11.2 Implementation Gantt Chart
The following Gantt chart illustrates the critical path activities, milestones, and dependencies across the five implementation phases. Task durations reflect realistic lead times for agricultural operations in South Africa, including seasonal planting and harvesting constraints.
Figure 11.1: Implementation Roadmap – 60-Month Gantt Chart
11.3 Critical Path & Dependencies
The project’s critical path runs through land acquisition, irrigation installation, and first planting season. Any delay in securing land agreements or installing irrigation infrastructure directly delays the first planting window (May–July), which in turn delays first revenue by a full year. Key dependencies include water use licence approval from the Department of Water and Sanitation (lead time: 6–12 months), which must be secured prior to irrigation installation; environmental impact assessment (EIA) authorisation for storage facility construction (lead time: 4–8 months); and equipment delivery and commissioning, particularly for centre-pivot irrigation systems with typical lead times of 3–6 months from order.
11.4 Key Milestones
| Milestone | Target Date | Success Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Company Incorporation & Funding Close | Month 1–2 | Legal entity established; debt and equity funds available |
| Land Secured (2,500 ha) | Month 3–5 | Lease agreements signed; access confirmed |
| Water Use Licence Approved | Month 4–8 | DWS approval received; conditions acceptable |
| Irrigation Installed (1,500 ha) | Month 3–7 | Centre pivots operational; water tested |
| First Planting Completed | Month 6–8 | 2,500 ha planted; emergence confirmed |
| First Harvest Completed | Month 11–13 | Grain delivered; quality assessed |
| Storage Facility Operational | Month 15–22 | 15,000t capacity; SAGIS registered |
| 3,500 Hectares Under Production | Month 25–30 | Third season planted at expanded scale |
| EBITDA Break-Even | Month 30–36 | Positive EBITDA on trailing 12-month basis |
| 5,000 Hectares Under Production | Month 37–48 | Full-scale operations achieved |
| Full Debt Service Coverage (>1.3x) | Month 24–30 | DSCR exceeds lender covenant level |
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