Dangote's Nigeria Tomato Plant Resumes After Years Idling
By Mustapha Adamu
March 19, 2019, 2:21 PM GMT+1Updated on March 20, 2019, 7:56 AM GMT+1
⚫Company agrees to buy from farmers at market-linked prices
⚫Plant designed to meet domestic demand for tomato paste
A
tomato-paste factory owned by Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote,
resumed production in Nigeria’s northern state of Kano after staying
idle for more than two years over a supply disruption partly caused by a
price dispute with farmers.
The factory, with a capacity for
1,200 metric tons of tomato paste daily and targeted at meeting domestic
demand, restarted production last week processing about 100 tons a day.
It will ramp up output as tomato supply improves, according to
Abdulkareem Kaita, the managing director of Dangote Farms Ltd, which
owns the factory.
“Our major challenge is the scarcity of the
tomato,” Kaita said in an interview at the factory in Kadawa, outside
the northern city of Kano. “The local tomato growers could not meet our
production demand, we also could not agree with the farmers on the price
of tomato per basket.”
Under a new deal with the farmers, the factory will buy tomatoes at prices pegged to what local markets are selling.
Dangote
is also developing its own farms with a special tomato strain that
could yield 60 tons per hectare, compared with the yield of 10 tons per
hectare being recorded by the local farmers, Kaita said. The company
plans to distribute the seedlings to growers to boost their output.
The
plant, which started production in 2015, was to help Africa’s most
populous nation cut paste imports of 300,000 tons a year from China by
using an estimated 900,000 tons of tomatoes lost after harvest every
year for lack of storage and processing facilities.
Dangote Farms
is part of Aliko Dangote’s diversified group of businesses, of which
cement manufacturing is the main one. The 61-year-old tycoon, who is
currently building a vast $12 billion oil refinery close to the
commercial hub of Lagos, is also invested in sugar and flour.
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