Mr. Jai Mirchandani, Chief Executive Officer of Avnash Industries
Ghana Limited – the country’s most formidable agro-industrial processing
company, has said it is ready to invest over US$100million into
government’s One District, One Factory (1D, 1F) policy to ensure its
success.
“We are investing over US$100million from next year. I strongly
believe in the President’s vision in the One District, One Factory and
the Planting for Food and Jobs policies. The President has the right
vision and we want to be the anchor company for the policy,” he said.
Avnash Industries Ghana Limited, producer of Golden drop edible oil,
has so far invested almost US$150million from 2007 into its
agro-business operations and is aimed at adding value to the country’s
agricultural produce and creating employment for wealth-creation.
The company is well known for its businesses in edible oil, rice,
soaps and detergents, shea butter, liquors, beer, whiskey and its
variants, biscuits and allied products, packing and branding of its
products – including PET and hard plastic containers. It established a
rice-mill in Tamale with a capacity of 450mt per day. It is a fully
automated mill of Buhler make, capable of milling par-boiled and brown
rice.
Mr. Mirchandani told this to B&FT on the sidelines of the maiden
Malaysia-Ghana Palm Oil Trade Fair and Seminar (POTS), which came off in
Accra.
Making a presentation under the topic ‘Branding the Oil Palm Value Chain in Ghana: Avnash’s Experiences’, Mr. Mirchandani charged the country to adopt successful oil palm models to help upscale the sector’s production volumes.
He said: “We need to leverage on models to scale-up the crop’s
production and to improve the production volumes. We need to work within
the local environment, we need to adopt models that have been
successful locally”.
Mr. Mirchandani explained that: “We have been thinking about the development of agriculture from the perspective of others.
“We have been looking at a paradigm incorrectly, because we have
tried to take models of where it has been successful like America and
Malaysia.”
He explained that the focus of Avnash is to be the anchor of the
agricultural industrialisation renaissance of Ghana by focusing on
investments in the agro-processing sector to provide ready markets for
both commercial and smallholder farmers.
Available data show that in just the first three quarters of 2017,
Ghana imported 213,000 tonnes of palm oil from Malaysia – valued at
US$149.1million and representing more than 70 percent of the commodity’s
total imports within the period.
The Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC), an organisation that promotes
the market expansion of Malaysian palm oil and its products, sees the
Ghanaian market as a growing one and is targetting even more exports –
particularly for the Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) industry.
The 2017 import figure represents an almost 10 percent increase on
the 2016 import of 203,000 tonnes, and the Southeast Asia economic giant
is targetting a 20 percent increase by the end of 2017; and up to
300,000 tonnes, estimated at US$210million, by 2018.
The nation’s annual demand for oil and fat is 680,000 tonnes while local
production hovers around 480,000 tonnes, leaving the gap of 200,000
tonnes to be filled by imports.
Dato’ Lee Yeow Chor, Chairman of Malaysia’s Palm Oil Council,
explained that West Africa’s growing population and economy naturally
means the per capita consumption of vegetable oil will increase.
Mr. Chor stated that Malaysian companies are ready to enter joint
venture agreements with local palm oil companies to produce the products
locally.
“Malaysian companies have entered into agreements with companies in
Indonesia, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Columbia and others, and we are
looking at deals like that here. We are hoping to discuss incentives and
government policies on establishing palm oil processing companies,” he
added.
Mr. Chor noted that: “Ghana is one of Malaysia’s biggest trading
partners in this region, with the total trade between the two countries
registering US$337million in 2016”.
Commenting on the trade relationship between Malaysia and Africa, Mr.
Chor said Malaysia considers the West African market as an important
destination for Malaysian palm oil.
“In recent years, there has been a significant upward trend of
Malaysian palm oil exports into this region. Last year, Malaysia
exported about one million tonnes of palm oil to all countries in the
West African region,” he said.
Speakers at the seminar included renowned local industry captains and
international experts from Malaysia, Ghana and the UK. The papers
covered topics on oils and fats – ranging from market outlook and trade
to oil palm planting and the logistics situation in Africa – and
attracted over 300 participants from both Malaysia and Ghana.
Participants from Malaysia took the opportunity to tour the 500mt per
day edible oil refinery of Avnash Industries Ghana Limited to acquaint
themselves with operations of the company.
The team visited various departments including the laboratory, production and refinery plants located at the Tema Port.
Thursday, December 21, 2017
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