Towards meeting the
national sugar master plan, Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc (DSR) is actively
pursuing a backward integration policy with a target of producing a total of
1.5 million tonnes of sugar per annum locally from its subsidiaries. The
company also plans to resume exports to selected West African countries in the
first quarter of 2014.
These indications emerged
from a statement issued by management of the company in Lagos at the weekend.
According to the statement, the company increased its market share of the
Nigerian sugar market in the nine months ended September 30, 2013.
It said the company plans
an additional Investment of N180billion for four factories in Sokoto and Kebbi
States and has 150,000 hectares of land allocated for the project in Kogi,
Kwara, Jigawa, Sokoto, Taraba and Kebbi.
DSR
acquired the moribund 50,000 tonnes per annum capacity Savannah Sugar Company
Limited in Numan, Adamawa State in 2002. The buy-over, midwifed by
the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), was the fallout of the failure of
several attempts made by the Federal Government to reposition the nation’s
foremost sugar company.
Dangote Industries
Limited (DIL), the parent company of DSR, emerged as the preferred bidder and
core investor and after which it embarked on a turnaround of the acquired
company.
As a front line player in the backward integration
policy,Savannah Sugar’s projection is to produce 1 million tonnes of white
sugar by 2015, cultivating 100,000 hectares in about six states of
Sokoto, Kebbi, Jigawa, Taraba, Kogi and Kwara employing over 50,000 Nigerians.
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