Thursday 21 July 2011

Opportunities in gas business

Cooking gas, also called Liquefied Petroleum Gas ( LPG ), is among products whose market is yet to be fully exploited in Kenya.
A vendor inspects  cooking gas cylinders. Kenya’s  annual cooking gas per capita  consumption is  two kilogrammes, which  is very low compared with peers  in sub-Saharan Africa.  REUTERS
The product is no longer considered a fuel for the upper and middle income households as many lower income earners are shifting to it for domestic cooking.
As rural electrification lights up households in remote Kenya, the same families are turning to LPG for cooking.
The Energy ministry has put in place a policy to increase LPG consumption with a view to reducing use of biomass (firewood and charcoal).
This is meant to increase the national forest cover from the current 1.7 per cent to 10 per cent.
Other East African countries have similar policies that consider LPG use one of the solutions to deforestation.
Dependence on biomass fuels for cooking and heating stands at about 80 per cent in Kenya.
Another reason for advocacy on LPG use is health motivated. It is a clean fuel, unlike firewood, charcoal, and kerosene which emit gasses that are largely harmful.
Particles contained in firewood and kerosene smoke contribute to respiratory illnesses. The pollutants are more pronounced in rural homes with inadequate ventilation.
Details emerging at the World LPG Association conference held in Nairobi recently indicate that Kenya’s annual cooking gas per capita consumption is only two kilogrammes.
Consumption
This is very low compared with her peers in sub-Saharan Africa. Senegal has a per capita usage of 10kg per year, Ivory Coast 9kg, South Africa 6kg, and Ghana 5kg.
North African counties have achieved an average LPG per capita consumption of about 55kg per annum. In these countries, high cooking gas use has been achieved mainly through government driven policies that promote availability and affordability.
Issues that limit LPG market penetration in Kenya include unavailability, unaffordability, lack of public awareness, and poor distribution infrastructure.
Interventions by the government have been both fiscal and regulatory. To make LPG more affordable, the government has zero-rated taxes on the product. It is also working on modalities to remove taxes on LPG cylinders and other appliances. The Energy Regulatory Commission’s recent intervention has impacted on the cooking gas market.

PwC’s growth plan



Consultancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has unveiled a multi-billion shilling expansion plan that will see it hire 500 partners and staff in Kenya in the next three years in a move that is set to intensify the battle for talent in Kenya’s financial advisory market.
The firm said the hiring in Kenya is part of a Sh9 billion investments package for Africa that is targeted at multinational firms that are trooping to the continent in search of growth.
These increased investments are in turn spurring agreements on joint ventures and business formation, due diligence investigations and mergers and acquisitions — watering the ground for advisory firms such as PwC, KPMG, Ernst & Young, and Deloitte to generate outsized consultancy fees.
The move by PwC to widen its staff to allow it tap this mega contracts is set to pave the way for a vicious battle for talent as its search for partners is likely to see it turn to rivals’ talent pool—setting off a spiral in wages as players move to defend and attract star performers.
“Our people are our biggest asset and it is no surprise that the majority of our investment will go towards recruiting additional skills, across our assurance, tax and advisory businesses,” Dennis Nally, the global chief executive of PwC said on Monday while unveiling the pan-African plan.
“Our focus will be on developing deeper industry expertise in relevant markets across Africa. We see Kenya as an important hub – both because of the availability of skills and the number of clients who have regional headquarters here.”
The firm is seeking to diversify its business further in an effort to reduce reliance on tax and auditing jobs by tapping the lucrative advisory roles.
This will not only place it in contention for talent with the ‘Big Four’ firms for talent but also investment bankers such as Dyer & Blair, Standard Investment Bank and CFC Stanbic that are also strengthening their staff base. The investment bankers are locked in vicious battle for talent in what has seen seasoned market analysts and traders change employees in the quest to tap informed and sophisticated equity investors and advisory deals.
Recent years
The plan by PwC to go heavy on staff recruitment looks set to offer employment opportunities for younger Kenyans qualified as CPAs who have in recent years been facing a tough job market as the big audit firms went slow on hiring.
Its rivals such as Deloitte and Ernst & Young reckon that they are also going big on hiring and they warn that talent look set to be expensive. “The increase in fees is a reflection of the rise in wages in the auditing field in recent years due to the scramble for top talent and I expect it to maintain the same gradient this year,” said Sammy Onyango, the managing partner at Deloitte.
He added that the race to grab partners from rivals is informed by their vast contacts that firms reckon will bring new business.
The pay of a senior auditor has risen to an average of Sh240,000 from about Sh150,000 in a period of three years with executives earning between Sh1 million ad Sh3 million besides sharing profits.
The rising interest by PwC in East Africa is linked to a recent trooping to the region of foreign investors chasing a piece of the multi-billion shilling natural resource projects (oil in Uganda and Sudan), setting up operational hubs, eyeing buy-outs in the common market or getting involved in the multi-billion infrastructure deals.
Key drivers of the expected capital flows include the formation of a common market in East Africa, which should create a market of about 126 million persons and allow free movement of factors of production.

Mr  Dennis Nally, the chairman of PwC International  (left), and Mr Phillip Kinisu, the  Africa Central senior partner,  address journalists during a  press briefing in Nairobi where they announced  a growth plan for Africa. HEZRON NJOROGE
Mr Dennis Nally, the chairman of PwC International (left), and Mr Phillip Kinisu, the Africa Central senior partner, address journalists during a press briefing in Nairobi where they announced a growth plan for Africa

How TCL rose from ‘chama’ to a big investor

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TransCentury Chairman  Zephania Mbugua (right)  with the CEO, Gachao Kiuna, after addressing a press conference at the Norfolk Hotel, Nairobi,  where he announced the listing of the company at the Nairobi Stock Exchange, last week.   Fredrick Onyango
TransCentury Chairman Zephania Mbugua (right) with the CEO, Gachao Kiuna, after addressing a press conference at the Norfolk Hotel, Nairobi, where he announced the listing of the company at the Nairobi Stock Exchange, last week. Fredrick Onyango 
By David Mugwe  (email the author

Posted  Tuesday, July 19 2011 at 00:00
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Once, they were a preserve of old rural women who periodically met and collected money for one of the members in what was known as merry-go-round.
Investment groups — also known as chamas in Kenya — have since the 1980s changed and attracted membership of younger people irrespective of their work or profession.
However, the challenge of their informal nature has remained even for a group of known names including Jimnah Mbaru, Joe Kamau, James Kahiu and the late James Gachui.
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According to TransCentury’s chairman Zephaniah Mbugua, the four and others — after coining the idea to start an investment group on one of the golf courses in Nairobi around 1995 — also faced the same hurdles as the thousands of informal investment groups, especially during the company’s early years.
“Initially there were about four gentlemen on one of the golf courses playing and discussing what we could do with our investments,” Mr Mbugua recently told a forum organised for investment groups. “We were among a group of seven who started TransCentury.”
Origins Investment Group Advisers and Chase Bank Limited organised the event.
“We felt we could have a greater impact if we came together and put our money together,” he went on. “As discussions continued, we had similar challenges of what time and where to meet, for example, and decided that with or without golf those who were serious must meet.”
Mr Mbugua said that after meeting times were set, the group of friends set a target to raise Sh50 million through their own funds and by recruiting friends in one and a half years.
“We ended up at about Sh14.3 million and it got to a point where we said we must start a company,” he said, explaining that the recruiting formula was such that each person was only allowed to bring in one of their friends — to avoid a situation where a member brought all their friends.
“When I look back, probably this was one of our greatest decisions,” said Mr Mbugua adding that this also helped bring in investors from diverse backgrounds who helped to build the company through their expertise.
Adding to the unique challenges facing investment groups, the company also wanted to keep a low profile due to the poor investment climate in the 90s partly explaining why TransCentury made a rule that no politicians would be allowed in as investors.
“Politically at the time you had to play very quietly and we did not want to be known,” he said. “This was the way Kenya was then...We also learnt very quickly that we needed to use professional organisations.”
Mr Mbugua says that the move helped assess investment opportunities and provide much needed advice.
He said that one of their first investments was East African Cables but since it was a public company, the venture also brought them into the public domain.
“We also invested in Castle Breweries and made money in the process but did not have a say,” said Mr Mbugua.
“This was an investment we went into without control but it was a learning process.”
He adds that their lack of control did not allow them to influence decisions.
The company, which is betting big on its stake in Kenya-Uganda Railway Holdings had Sh9.43 billion in assets, made Sh6.79 billion in revenue and Sh468 million profit after tax as at December 2010 with the bulk of its investments in electric cables and transformer companies in Kenya, Tanzania, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Africa and most recently Zambia.
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Mr Mbugua said that another of their main challenges was managing the large number of investors — who now were now were more than 20 making it difficult to make decisions quickly — adding that investment groups needed not only to become professional but also select a board of directors as representatives of other shareholders.
“What starts of as an entrepreneurial culture needs to be professionalised. As long as you want to run chamas as a hobby, there will be no growth,” he said. “You need to have someone manage it but it requires good timing as to when it is right to have a management team.”
He says that survival of a chama was dependent on member’s commitment.
Mr Mbugua said that TransCentury has never benefited from any political connections, otherwise, such patronage would have helped the firm win a tender case they filed against Kenya Power in 2006.
Tony Wainaina, Origins Investment Group Advisers chairman said that investment groups — which control about Sh80 billion in assets — play a major role in wealth creation but they are disorganised and fragmented, adding to their high failure rate. “They need to have strong governance structures and clear strategic plans, which will serve as a road map to where the group is going,” said Mr Wainaina, adding that it was also important to have shareholder agreements.
Mr Wainaina said that other causes of failure include not separating management from membership, weak leadership and lack of distinction between business and personal relationships.

Dominion Farms puts power to create wealth in the people’s hands

American investor Calvin Burges heard about the Yala Swamp and its collapsed rice fields from a friend. That was 11 years ago.
Today, as he stands, hands akimbo, and casts his eyes across the thousands of acres he has reclaimed he could as well claim to have made economic sense out of a swamp. The rolling rice fields, the John Deer tractors and harvestors that plough through the fields showcase a massive investment —hidden in the heart of Siaya County.
Burges, the owner of Dominion Farms, took us around the vast area that today draw researchers and agro-tourists from all corners of the world.
“A friend of mine who had visited the area in 2000 told me there was an opportunity here worth checking out,” he recalls.
“When we came to Yala the terrain was impenetrable and every inch of where we are standing right now was submerged under swamp water. We leased the land for 25 years, with the chief purpose of transforming it into farmland”.
Yala was never a swamp to begin with. It was barren land but decades of massive pollution caused by human settlement upstream saw the water slowly stagnate and the swamp gradually grow bigger.
Mr Burges ran into a challenge.
“There are two things to do when you are reclaiming land from a swamp”, he says. “First you have to stop the water from filling it up and secondly you have to drain what is already in”.
“Our initial step was to stop the flow of water to the swamp and we built 12km of dykes that ran from the dam down to Lake Namboyo and basically relocate the river. We split it and sent part of it into Lake Kanyaboli and part of it to Lake Namboyo”.
This stopped the water from flowing into the swamp and the next step for Mr Burges and his team was to drain the water.
“For the last three years we have been draining it to lower the water table and as this goes down we start developing the land”.
The process is challenging and though heavily mechanised, relies on the course of nature and cannot be rushed.
“The land dries from the top down and you have to wait for it to dry substantially before you can use any equipment on it which makes the process painstakingly slow. In addition to this, rain water reverses the drainage process and takes you back to the beginning.”
Moreover, land reclamation, like any other earth moving exercise like mining and road construction is not cheap. Mr Burges has so far spent over $40 million doled out in the last seven years. Most of the cost has been consumed by the assembly of tonnes of earth-moving equipment from the US and Brazil and labour costs.
The process is far from over and the costs keep rising.
Dominion Farms sits on five thousand acres of rehabilitated swampland and Mr Burges intends to reclaim all the swamp land under his leasehold.

 The farm is seeking to increase capacity that could make it  the leading producer of rice in  Africa and among the top 10 producers of fingerlings in the world. COURTESY

“We have 17,050 acres of property and we have to date developed approximately 5,000 of that but we want to reclaim every bit of it. The water table is falling and soon we can get more equipment on the land. We hope that with all factors holding constant, the rest of the reclamation will be complete in the next two years”.
Mr Burges started developing the land so far reclaimed in 2005. He raised the level of the water to make it accessible and then extended the power lines to the farm and to the local communities.
After several batches of crop research, Dominion Farms settled on paddy rice which could produce two harvests per annum. A state of the art rice processing plant with the ability of processing 10,000 tonnes of rice per day was installed and the first batch hit the shelves in 2007.
The farm has a research facility on site and propagates its own rice seed. “Everything is done here from the propagation of the rice seed, growing, harvesting, milling, packaging and sale,” says Mr Chris Abir, Dominion Farms director.
Retailing at Sh85 per kilogramme, Prime Harvest Rice is the flagship of Dominion Farms’ range of products and was recently entered in a cooking contest in Britain and won. The current rice production output for the farm is about 3,500 – 4,000 tonnes per annum and is looking to double this output by the end of next year. At the completion of the reclamation in the next two years, Dominion Farms is looking to expand its output to 10,000 – 12,000 tons of rice a year
Aside from rice production, Dominion Farms has ventured into the production of fingerlings and is the main contract supplier for the government’s fish farming ESP programme. “Currently we are supplying the Kenyan government with fingerlings at their request and we sell two million fingerlings per month either directly or through our 26 distributors, says Mr Burges.”
The demand for fingerlings is great owing to the adoption of fish farming throughout the country and Dominion Farms has up to 200 farmers in the waiting list.
Production costs
The farm also operates eight trial fish ponds each with the capacity of holding 80,000 fish and is planning to set up tens of ponds in a massive fish cropping programme to cover 160 acres of land.
The farm breeds Nile Perch and on small -scale and cat fish which is still on a trial basis. Here again the costs of production are staggering. Currently the farm has spent more than $2 million on breeding costs alone.
“Fish farming requires proper breeding stock and you have to be very careful to avoid in-breeding,” says Mr Burges. “This causes stock that is susceptible to disease. If you are going to have a fish farm you begin from five years before you start the fish farm and continue forever. 
“You always have to do more research, develop healthier strains and ensure that your fish have the correct growth span and maximum output. We have brought our breed from an average of 24- 29 per cent meat content to an average of 35 per cent and in breeding this is a significant step”.
The fish farm is also fully self-sufficient. From the propagation of the breed, the breeding process, harvesting, packaging and selling everything is done at the farm. The fish retails for Sh200 per kilogramme and can be found in local small stores.
“Our target market is Kenya and our prices are deliberately lower. We are trying to reach to the majority of Kenyans who are in the low income bracket,” says Mr Burges. “For us at Dominion Farms, money is not the primary goal. The primary concern is providing food security for the growing population”.
Part of the conditions for obtaining the lease for Dominion Farms was to improve food security for the local population. In this regard, the farm sells most of its produce directly to retail stores and local supermarkets and avoids dealing with middle men.
“Everything we produce is consumed in East Africa,” says Mr Abir. “Some people may buy it and sell it in other markets but what happens to it after it leaves our hands we have no control over it. We have however heard that Prime Harvest rice is in Southern Sudan but we are not the ones sending it there.”
In addition to the rice and fish farming programmes, Dominion Farms is venturing into the large scale production of Soya beans. The soya beans are a chief ingredient in the production of fish, chicken and dog feeds which the farm produces.
The farm has also acquired a herd of 100 heifers in a test programme for dairy and beef production and hopes to build a herd of 600 cattle for milk and beef production in the next two years. Plans are also under way to roll out a brand of dog feed and a porridge mix to retail under the same name.
“We are also in the process of setting up two power sources at the farm”, says Mr Burgess. “One will be a biomass digester for the generation of biogas and a hydro-power production plant on a waterfall 1,153 metres above sea level built on a canal on River Yala”.
The energy generated from the facilities will complement the propane that is usually used to run the heavy machinery at the farm mills. In addition to this, surplus energy will be sold to the national grid and distributed to the locals.
Dominion Farms is also an agro tourism site in the western tourism circuit. Every month the management receives an average of 50 requests for visits from learning institutions in Kenya and abroad.

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