21/02/2026
Applying Strategic Risk Architecture – Integrated (SRA-I) to South Africa’s FMD outbreak
South Africa’s Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak is not just an agricultural issue. It is a test of institutional resilience.
In my ongoing work developing a structured framework I refer to as Strategic Risk Architecture – Integrated (SRA-I), I examine how structural pressure interacts with governance capacity, operational exposure and capital buffers.
The current outbreak provides a live case study.
First, structural pressure.
More than 800 open outbreaks have been reported nationally in recent updates. Vaccine shipments are arriving and local production has restarted. That shows recognition of scale. But the structural environment remains highly stressed.
Second, governance capacity.
Movement controls, quarantine enforcement and traceability systems require veterinary surge capability, rapid testing infrastructure and coordinated national and provincial command structures. The question is not whether plans exist. The question is whether ex*****on capacity exceeds spread velocity.
Third, operational exposure.
Livestock auctions, transport routes and informal animal movement act as transmission multipliers. Disease spreads through logistics systems. Containment must operate at the same speed.
Fourth, capital resilience.
Farmers face restricted movement, export disruptions and liquidity strain. Without credible financial buffers and compensation mechanisms, compliance weakens under economic pressure.
Fifth, foresight.
Vaccination is necessary. But surveillance integration, data transparency and rebuilding long term veterinary capacity are what determine whether recurrence is prevented.
The critical question therefore becomes this: does the Department of Agriculture currently possess sufficient operational leverage, veterinary surge capacity, enforcement reach and integrated data systems to reduce transmission faster than it spreads?
Intent appears present. Vaccine procurement is underway. Coordination structures are being referenced. But leverage is not measured by policy statements. It is measured by measurable reduction in outbreak velocity.
In risk architecture terms, outbreaks stabilise only when governance capability exceeds structural pressure. Will Min. Steenhuizen achieve this sooner than later is the question to be asked.
The Epidemic does not test the government intentions. It tests capabilities and systems.
This analysis forms part of my ongoing development of the Strategic Risk Architecture – Integrated (SRA-I), a model aimed at understanding systemic stress across sectors and institutions.