Kenya plans to privatise sugar companies within 12 months

struggling: Mumias Sugar Company Factory. Mumias posted a pretax loss of Sh3.14 billion in 2014.PHOTO/FILE
struggling: Mumias Sugar Company Factory. Mumias posted a pretax loss of Sh3.14 billion in 2014.PHOTO/FILE

Kenya has approved the sale of the government's stakes in five sugar companies and expects to sell 75 per cent stakes in transactions that will be completed in the next nine to 12 months, the Privatisation Commission said on Friday.

The five companies are in urgent need of modernisation to survive competition from the entry of other sugar producers and an impending end to sugar import limits from the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa trade bloc after the end of a one-year extension given early this year.

The government will sell shares in millers Nzoia, South Nyanza, Chemelil, Muhoroni and Miwani, the commission said in a statement published in a local daily.

Two of the businesses, Muhoroni and Miwani, are in receivership.

The Privatisation Commission said it plans to sell 51 per cent of each of the millers to strategic investors with a track record of managing sugar companies.

"The proceeds will fund the rehabilitation and modernisation needs of the sugar companies," it said.

A further 24 per cent of the companies will be sold to employees and outgrowers -- farmers who grow sugarcane on contract for the mills.

The East African nation is also struggling to improve output because of relatively high production costs and produces a total of 600,000 tonnes of sugar a year, compared with annual consumption of 800,000 tonnes.

The deficit is covered through the strict import quotas from COMESA.

The leading sugar producer, Mumias Sugar, reported a 2014 pretax loss of 3.4 billion shillings ($38 million), compared with a 2.2 billion shilling loss the previous year, blaming weaker sugar prices.

The government has reached a Sh5 billion ($54.9 million) deal with banks to help cash-strapped Mumias as it implements a reorganisation involving heavy job cuts and a halving of its board of directors.

The Privatisation Commission said that the government ultimately aims to sell its remaining 25 per cent stake in the sugar companies by other means, including initial public offerings, while reserving a six per cent stake for farmers.

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