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Multinationals Keen on Ethiopia’s Textile Industry

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Multinational textile companies are increasingly pitching their tent in Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous nation. This week, BDL Group, a Bangladeshi company announced a $30 million (765 Million Birr) investment, which will go into the construction of a textile and garment factory in Mekele City, Ethiopia.

The factory will be built on 68 hectares of land received from the Mekele City Administration and will employ at least 3,000 locals.

According to reports, construction will commence by December and production will be delayed till the last quarter of 2015.

BDH’s investment comes barely a month after Chinese textile company, Jiangsu Lianfa Textile Co. Ltd revealed its plan to build a $500 million textile factory in the East African country after making similar pre-investment assessments in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania.

Jiangsu Lianfa Textile Co. is a leading textile company with extensive operations in various countries in where it sells woven fabric, apparel and textile. Its plant, which will be situated in Ethiopia’s capital city, Addis Ababa, is expected to create at least 20,000 jobs when operational, inside sources have revealed.

Mekele believes that the growing influx of investment in Ethiopia’s textile business will enhance the country’s efforts to improve local companies engaged in the manufacturing sector.

While The Economist projects an annual growth of 7 to 8 percent through 2016 for the country, Ethiopia’s Government Growth and Transformation plan places growth rates of at least 11.2 percent per annum during a decade long period it set to achieve a middle-income status.

One of the important sectors it hopes will play a primary role in achieving this status is the manufacturing industry, for which textile is grouped into.

According to Thomas Ballweg, a procurement and technical consultant at GermanFashion; Ethiopia offers a number of advantages that could make it play a major role in the textile/fashion business.

“On the one hand are the lower costs – much lower than in China – with 80 million people living there. And, it’s near the sea – and quick to get to Europe via the Suez Canal,” Ballweg said in a media report.

Ethiopian textiles are mostly exported to China, Italy, Germany, Turkey, China, Italy and the US. Last year, Ethiopia made $111.45 million textile from export revenue.

[VenturesAfrica]


Number of Foreign Investors Grows by Threefold

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The number of investors interested to start business and investment in Ethiopia has grown by threefold during the past two years, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

Some 365 investors visited Ethiopia in 2005 E.C., either to see the opportunities, conduct feasibility assessment or open their investment, this number has reached over 1,000 last year – up by almost threefold.

The investors came under business delegations mostly led by high-level officials of their respective countries, Kebede Abera, Business Diplomacy Director General at the Ministry told ENA.

The delegations were from China, Japan, Finland, Italy, Israel, Turkey and UAE, among others.

The director said the government of Ethiopia has undertaken valuable activities regarding economic diplomacy to attract more foreign direct investment.

He attributed the success to concerted efforts carried out to facilitate things to smoothen the activities of investors, including land grant and infrastructure development.

The government is working to increase foreign direct investment so as to ensure the development of the country, he said.

Ethiopia has become one of investment destinations for branded companies which, he said, is evident from the increasing number of investors from all over the world.

According to Ahmed Abtew, Minister of Industry, a number of activities carried out over the past years helped to increase the number of foreign investors in the country.

The Ministry is working with stakeholders to address challenges raised by investors, he said, adding, addressing the challenges will help raise the number of investors further.

[ENA]

Ethiopia to host Powering Africa Summit

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Addis Ababa is set to host powering Africa summit, the annual platform for European financiers and developers to connect with Ethiopia’s government and energy ministries, from November 21-22, 2014.

The meeting welcomes the participation of international company representatives looking to harness the vast renewable energy resources and advance power generation in Ethiopia. Among them are the CEO of leading African Infrastructure firm Black Rhino, Brian Herlihy, will meet with international company representatives and Ethiopian government officials.

Brian Herlihy and his team will also shed light on their investment prospects in power generation projects and best practice on procurement delivery in the region. Herlihy will also speak about the company’s current involvement in Djibouti.

Black Rhino is comprised of finance and development experts including Managing Director Mimi Alemayehou, previously the Vice President of OPIC. Following the company’s recent merger with global asset management firm Blackstone, which looks at long-term investments in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Blackstone-Black Rhino partnership is setting out to undertake transformational projects in Africa’s power and infrastructure sectors necessary to maintain significant economic growth.

Black Rhino are amongst the industry leaders joining global players such as USAID, Reykjavic Geothermal, OPIC, Development Bank of Southern Africa and Goldwind International Holdings alongside H.E. Alemayehu Tegenu, Minister of Water Irrigation & Energy, H.E. Dawano Kedir, State Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ethiopian Utility, investors and financiers bringing capacity building in the region’s renewable energy sector.

The meeting is the annual platform for European financiers and developers to connect with Ethiopia’s government and energy ministries to build capacity in the region’s renewable energy sector.

[NewBusinessEthiopia]

Meetings Connect 100 Ethiopian Businesses, Potential Investors

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The U.S. government, through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID’s) Agricultural Growth Program-Livestock Market Development project (AGP-LMD), Tuesday held the fourth of four regional livestock investment forums in Mekelle.

The forums connect foreign and local investors with 100 pre-selected local companies that have lucrative investment opportunities in dairy, meat and live animal business, a press release the US Embassy sent to WIC yesterday indicated.

Dr. Mebratu Meles, State Minister, Ministry of Industry, addressing participants noted that, “The opportunity is huge and the government is ready to support as much as necessary”.

The discussions with government officials and industry experts focused on the existing challenges and opportunities in the sector. Investor-investee round table discussions established links among foreign and local investors and pre-selected, high potential investee companies.

Gary Robbins, a USAID Ethiopia official, said, “The competitiveness of the livestock and related industries in Ethiopia can grow when the private sector actively participates. Our objective is to connect investors with opportunities that also will benefit small holder farmers whom we support.”

The Mekelle forum was the fourth regional livestock investment forum organized by USAID’s Agricultural Growth Program-Livestock Market Development (AGP-LMD). Three others were held in September and early October in Adama, Oromia, Bahir Dar, Amhara and Hawassa, SNNP regional state.

A promising outcome of the exchanges, 18 businesses so far have attracted the interest of nine local and three international investor companies. A social investment fund and a private equity investment consulting firm from the U.S. were among the investor companies at the forums. The meetings also provided 26 livestock businesses with opportunities to make initial contacts for sales relationships with others in their respective dairy, meat, and live animal value chains.

Dr. Gebregziabher Gebreyohannes, State Minister of Agriculture, indicated the importance of the livestock sector for Ethiopia’s Growth and Transformation Strategy: “Our government has dedicated great resources and effort to resolve various challenges that have been hampering the development of the livestock sector. I would like to reassure current and potential investors in the sector that the government will continue to extend its support to them and to improve the investment climate to ensure profitability and sustainability of the sector”.

USAID’s Agricultural Growth Program-Livestock Market Development (AGP-LMD) is funded by the U.S. Government’s Feed the Future Initiative, as part of USAID’s contribution to the Government of Ethiopia’s Agricultural Growth Program. The project works to connect middle-of-the-value chain businesses with higher-value, and/or higher-capacity markets.

[WaltaInformationCenter]

Ethiopia to Generate 300 MW Solar Energy

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The Ethiopian Electric Power headed by Engineer Azeb Asnake signed on Oct.14 a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with a US-based company Green Technology Africa Inc. (GTA) to generate 300 megawatts of solar energy.

The partnership signifies the collaboration of the government and the private sector which aims at supporting Ethiopia’s green development strategies with the underlined expectations and demands of the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP), Dereje Mesfin, CEO GTA Inc, told The Reporter.

The CEO also told The Reporter that based on the signed MoU GTA had agreed to deliver 300 megawatts of solar generated photovoltaic system as a turnkey project in areas such as Dire Dawa, Kombolcha and Desse areas of the Amhara Regional State.

The proposal of the project was submitted to the Ministry of Water, Irrigation and Energy about a year ago and the generated 300 megawatts of solar power will be linked to the national grid.

The company has completed the pre-feasibility study to implement the project and the signing of the MoU will grant GTA the ability to start a full and complete feasibility study on specific region. The project is estimated to be worth USD 600 million and, according to the MoU, GTA is expected to set up shop in Ethiopia within the next six months.

In relation to the significance of the project, the CEO told The Reporter: “In addition to generating 300 MW of renewable energy that will fill in the gap of energy supply deficiency in Ethiopia, GTA will also help create jobs and offer global expertise that will increase the “know-how” in green energy for local experts.”

The CEO added that the project is owned by the Ethiopian government and the role of GTA is to undertake the overall activities of the project and in relation to the issue of the management of the project the Ethiopian Electric Power has not yet decided. “If they have the qualified professionals to manage and administer the project after its completion we will hand over the project, if not we will also engaged in the management,” the CEO said. However, he added that it is not yet decided and it will be decided in the future.

Regarding the source of finance, the CEO told The Reporter: “We are planning to find and facilitate the finance from various sources mainly from President Barack Obama’s Power Africa Initiative and transfer it to the government of Ethiopia and the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development (MoFED) will approve the finance once we find the finance from various sources.

The duration of the overall project will be determined after six months which is included in the MoU and, according to the CEO, the issues related to finance and other matters are expected to be finalized within the coming six months and if things go according to the plan the CEO told The Reporter that they will sign a contract after six months and that will determine the overall duration of the project.

GTA provides engineering consulting and management services for transmission, distribution, industrial and generation clients. It is also engaged in the process of evaluating the transmission grid deliverability, applying for interconnection, and coordinating design, engineering, procurement of renewable generation facilities.

[TheReporterEthiopia]

Biosafety amendment to ease restriction on controversial GMO Import

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A Biosafety Proclamation amendment, which seeks to lessen the restriction on the contentious issue of importation of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs), was tabled before parliament on Thursday, angering environmentalists.

The bio-safety proclamation, which was ratified in 2009, has strict provisions on importing GMOs. It requires an applicant to obtain an Advance Informed Agreement, a written consent granted by the Ministry of Environment and Forest, or a special permit to import GMOs. The existing law also requires “the competent national authority of the country of export to the effect that the competent national authority takes full responsibility.”

The proposed draft amendment takes away the full responsibility from a government office of the GMO’s country of origin and gives it to the exporter.

There has been a strong push, particularly from researchers in the field of bio-technology, for a more lax legislation whereas environmentalists, wary of the risks associated with GMOs, wanted a stricter law.

“Some provisions contained in the existing law were an obstacle to undertake works in bio-technology and do not meet the current developmental needs of the country,” states a document attached to the draft amendment.

In a bid to boost to the manufacturing sector particularly the textile sector, the government has been considering the option of using genetically modified crops like BT cotton. The option was considered as an alternative to alleviate shortages of raw material which has plagued the textile sector.

However, local environmental activists found the proposed amendment as “worrisome”. A bio-engineering expert and activist, who opted to remain anonymous, believes that the precautionary legislation is being used to promote modern bio-technology.

“We have no issues with modern bio-technology but it is very dangerous to use modern bio-technology as a cover to promote genetic engineering,” he told The Reporter. Despite the well documented risks associated with GMOs the draft amendment is proposing to render inapplicable the existing law enacted with the aim of averting the dangers associated, he added.

Four leaked Cables of US Embassy Addis Ababa of August to December 2009 and Feb 2010 reveal strong opposition to the Ethiopian Biosafety Proclamation and a persistent lobby to scrap it. The Cables claimed that move was driven by US corporate interests.

The draft bill, which was submitted to Parliament’s Forest and Natural Resource Standing Committee, contains amendments to six provisions to the existing legislation. The bill was drafted by the Ministry of Environmental & Forest (MoEF), Ministry of Agriculture (MoA), Ethiopian Institution of Agricultural Research (EIAR) and the Ministry of Science and Technology (MoST).

[TheReporterEthiopia]

Ethio-Turkish Businesswomen to Strengthen Business Ties

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The first-ever delegation of businesswomen from Turkey visited and held business meetings for three days in the capital, starting on Thursday.

The meetings have been organized by the first lady, Roman Tesfaye, who in June, had led Ethiopian delegates to Turkey.

The business-to-business meetings with Ethiopian counterparts were held at the Ethiopian National Archives and Library Agency, where 25 businesswomen were represented from the confederation of businessmen and industrialists of Turkey (TUSKON). According to Saime Yildiz, head of the delegation, the group came for the first time representing women-owned businesses from TUSKON.

First Lady Roman told reporters that the visit and the business-to-business meetings were organized by her office, which, according to the first lady, is an opportunity to nurture business environments from both sides. She said another group of Ethiopian business owners are looking for more exposure to the Turkish business climate. The first lady also noted that women engaged in the textile and garment and leather sectors are making use of the global market. According to Roman, in pursuit of support for those women investors, she (Roman) will work on assisting women who are excelling in their career. She also said that she would assist those who will work in providing job opportunities for the most marginalized women in the society.

The first lady is known for instigating an initiative dubbed “Connecting 1500 Women and Young Girls to the Export Market,” which among others will provide opportunities for women entrepreneurs to have access to foreign markets. One of such business owners is Bethlehem Berhane, founder and owner of Entoto Beth Artisan located around Entoto Mountain in the northern part of the capital. Bethlehem told The Reporter that she employees 145 staffs, out of that 128 are women from the most deprived parts of the Entoto locality. Being part of the delegation in June, led by the first lady, she said she had found Turkish suppliers for her company. Bethlehem noted that currently her company exports jewels and leather goods to the US and European markets.

She said she is venturing on to expand her business to processing metal accessories aimed at substituting importations of accessories and related inputs. That said, the new planned expansion will cost some 22.5 million birr and will employ some 300 women. Yildiz told The Reporter that companies like Entoto Beth Artisan are getting momentum because they are more focused on social business activities. She went on to say that the impacts of the likes of Bethlehem surfacing are appreciated in the outside world.

The Turkish businesswomen, according to Yildiz, are extending their stay in town for ten days to look more into big enterprises so that they might have more mutual foundations on the business prospects.

According to Gashaw Debebe, secretary general of the Ethiopian Chamber of Commerce and Sectoral Association, the two nations have enjoyed relationships since way back in the days of the Ottoman Empire. First lady Roman said that both Turkey and Ethiopia have a trade volume of USD three billion. She also mentioned that there are some 350 Turkish companies investing in Ethiopia, out of which she named Ayka Addis Textile and Bmet Cables manufacturers.

[TheReporterEthiopia]

The 4th Ethiopia CEOs Breakfast Forum

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The CEOs Forum is a members-only club that brings together influential CEOs of leading Ethiopian businesses with government officials and international development agencies. The goal of the forum is to serve as a platform to inform leaders on current business and economic trends as well as afford them a rare opportunity to network closely throughout the year.

http://preciseethiopia.com/the-ceo-forum/


The Next Shirt You Buy May Say ‘Made In Ethiopia.’ Here’s Why

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“Made in China” may be leaving your wardrobe

As labor costs in the “world’s factory” continue to rise dramatically, global fashion brands are looking elsewhere to source apparel. In addition to established hubs like Bangladesh and Vietnam, the garment game is ripe for new players: Myanmar (Burma), Haiti and Ethiopia, among others, are looking to rejuvenate a once-thriving trade or even build one entirely from scratch.

China will shed approximately 85 million manufacturing jobs in the coming years, which some development experts say could be a golden opportunity for producing economic development, a la South Korea. The standard narrative: Start at the bottom with low-skill, basic textile manufacturing (like T-shirts) and work your way up to more complex garments (like suits), then to more complex goods like electronics.

Improved quality of life and a rising consumer class will naturally follow, creating sustainable and natural growth in China. At that point, garment assembly would be seen as lowbrow.

“You don’t make tanks out of textiles,” says Derek Scissors, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

But whether China’s successors actually can follow the “textile to tank” model is a point of serious contention. Some argue that new entrants only can survive by offering the lowest costs — read: unlivable wages and minimal, if any, rights. Footloose garment brands — apt to flee to wherever labor costs are lowest — make nurturing textiles into an industry with highly skilled workers, robust infrastructure and effective regulation extremely difficult.

It’s harder to unlearn bad habits, so the best shot at a sustainable industry may be Ethiopia, which is essentially a blank slate. Despite dire infrastructure shortcomings, Ethiopia’s access to a continental market with six of the 10 fastest-growing economies and one of the world’s largest cattle (leather) stocks spurs “China 30 years ago” comparisons makes the nation an attractive long-term investment.

The Chinese and Turkish certainly seem to think so. Huajian Shoes and Akya Tekstil, two of the world’s largest apparel-makers, are planning multibillion-dollar “apparel-cities” fit for up to 60,000 workers and 50 different manufacturers each.

H&M, the Swedish apparel giant, has staked an early claim in Ethiopia as well. By partnering with nonprofit Swedfund, it’s championing a “responsible” way forward with three new sustainable factories, and more planned. The move by an early entrant to set an ethical foundation in a country mirrors the work of Gap in Myanmar, also known as Burma, this past June.

Once called an “outpost of tyranny” because of its brutal military dictatorship, Myanmar underwent vast democratic reforms in 2011; stifling economic sanctions from the West were eased a year later. Now the country’s garment industry is on track to bring in $1.7 billion of export revenue in 2014 — compared with $900 million in 2012.

By partnering with USAID and local nongovernmental organizations in Myanmar, Gap is trying to avoid the plunder-and-bail reputation of the garment industry.

“We want to lend resources in such an important time for the country,” to set a precedence of humane working conditions and work with the government to build institutions to protect best practices, said Debbie Mesloh, Gap’s senior director of government and public affairs.

Scott Nova, director of the Worker Rights Consortium, finds such proclamations of corporate altruism laughable.

“The idea that a brand would move into a country to make the world a better place is absurd,” he says. “They do it because it’s cheaper.”

Indeed, according to the country’s own manufacturers association, Myanmarese workers make as little as $30 per month, below the World Bank’s $1.25/day poverty threshold. And early reports show Ethiopian garment workers earn between $37 and $53 per month.

Those figures will make those garment workers the world’s lowest-paid, behind Bangladeshi workers, who earn approximately $68 a month.

Those data are irrefutable, but some experts argue that such low wages — once a characteristic of all now-developed economies, most recently Taiwan, South Korea and Hong Kong — are a necessary initial sacrifice to attract investors. And if job seekers voluntarily choose to work for low wages in a factory, that means it’s the best of a series of bad options, says Benjamin Powell, director of the Free Market Institute at Texas Tech University.

“If we were to impose laws on these countries mandating higher pay and [better] working conditions, it would take away the very reason companies chose to come there, thus leaving [the workers] trapped in an even worse poverty,” he said.

In Haiti, where 80 to 90 percent of the exports are apparel, there’s some hope for development with labor standards. Conditions in Haiti have improved significantly, argues Arianna Rossi, research and policy officer at Better Work, an arm of the International Labour Organization that specializes in the garment industry. The minimum wage was raised in May of this year to $5 a day, and Better Work’s most recent report shows factories are complying almost across the board; 37 percent of workers are even receiving at least $6.75.

To be sure, the garment industry hasn’t proved the jobs creator for Haiti that it was touted to be. A two-year-old industrial park in northern Haiti, Caracol, financed to the tune of $124 million by the U.S., has led to only 3,000 jobs, instead of the projected 60,000. That’s despite duty-free access to the United States via the HOPE II trade agreement and serious promotion from the State Department, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton.

Still, companies are coming to the realization that “treating workers better is good for business,” Rossi says, citing a Better Work research project as proof of concept.

Advocates like Nova aren’t sold. For one, if the garment industry was a way out of poverty, wages shouldn’t have declined for the past decade across the world or, on average, be just a third of what’s considered a “living wage.”

Whether the garment industry is good for national and individual economic development or not, countries like Haiti, Myanmar and Ethiopia are rolling out the red carpet for fashion’s name brands. Whether they’ll have buyers’ remorse remains to be seen.

[npr]

Ethiopia’s GDP reaches 1.5 Trillion Birr

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The Ministry of Finance and Economic Development has announced that Ethiopia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has reached 1.5 trillion birr, and registered an estimated 10.3 percent economic growth last Ethiopian fiscal year (EFY).

The State Minister, Dr. Abraham Tekeste, said Ethiopia has shown rapid and stable macroeconomic growth and had managed to increase per capita income to 632 US dollars from 558 US dollars the previous fiscal year. Inflation remained in single figures.

Dr. Abraham said domestic saving reached 22.5% of GDP, and the rate of investment and export of goods and services accounted for 40.3% and 11.7% percent respectively. The State Minister said the industry sector grew faster than agriculture and service sectors, registering 21.2% annual growth, compared to agriculture (5.4%) and service (11.9%) during the past fiscal year.

The overall share of agriculture in the national economy decreased from 42% in 2005 EFY to 40% in 2006; industry grew to 14%, up from 13%. The service sector reached 46%, up from 45%. Ethiopia Fiscal Year 2006 was the 11th consecutive year in which Ethiopia’s economy grew on average by 10.9 percent.

The State Minister said agriculture, industry and service registered 9, 13.8 and 12.2 annual growth respectively. He added that the low performance of exports in the economy, especially in the manufacturing sector, was, however, a challenge to the country during the period.

[allAfrica]

Oilseeds, Chat Revenue Grow by 10, 8 Fold

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The export earnings from oilseeds and chat grew by 10 and 8 fold respectively during the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) period, the Ministry of Trade said. The revenue the nation earned from these items is growing constantly.

Last fiscal year, the nation earned a total of 940 million USD revenues from oilseeds and chat, which are the second and third largest revenue generating agricultural items.

Oilseed and Chat are the only agricultural items that have shown persistent revenue growth throughout the GTP period, Abdurrahman Seid public relations deputy head at the Ministry told ENA.

The increasing demand for oilseeds at the international market and increasing amount of the items are the major reasons for the increase.

Revenue secured from oilseeds has grown by over 10 fold, has reached 642.7 million USD last year. Oilseeds generated 63.2 million USD in 2003E.C, the first year of the GTP period.

The revenue gained from oilseeds export over the past four years grew by more than 10 fold.

Increasing the demand for oil seeds and high private involvement are the major causes for the increase in revenue, Abdurrahman said.

The increasing utilization of modern technologies and inputs and consistent support from the government helped to increase production, thereby raise amount of export, he added.

Chat is the other agricultural item, its revenues has on the rise. Revenue from chat, which was 33.1 million USD at the first year of the GTP, increased by more than eight fold and reached 297.3 million USD last year.

Chat has become the second fastest growing agricultural export item next to sesame, which contributes for over 96 percent of revenue of oilseeds, in terms of revenue generating.

The ever-growing demand for chat among neighboring countries led for the increasing in revenue earned from chat, he said.

Farmers opt to cultivate Chat, the third largest income generating item among agricultural products, because of its reward, which is high profit with low effort during cultivation, Abdurrahman added.

Despite yearly fluctuations, coffee continues to be the number one revenue generating item. Last year coffee generates 718.7 million USD revenues.

In spite of being number one in terms of revenue, the revenue has been declining throughout the GTP period, from 841.6 million USD at end of first year of the GTP to 718.7 million USD last year.

Lower price, increasing competition at the international market and tendency of some exporters to supply the item to the local market instead of exporting it are the main drives for the decline, according to Abdurrahman.

The nation has been exerting efforts to address the challenge related to exporters supplying coffee to local market, he added, activities are also underway to improve its quality.

Last year a total of 2.149 billion USD revenues were earned from export of live animals and agricultural items, excluding horticultural products. The performance meets 77 percent of the goal set for that year, which was 2.792 billion USD.

[ENA]

Improving Industries’ Production Capacity, involvement of Local Companies Prioritized

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The Ministry of Industry said it has given priority to improve the production capacity of industries and improve involvement of local companies in the sector during this fiscal year.

Efforts being exerted to encourage local companies engage in the manufacturing sector will be sustained, Melaku Taye PR Head at the Ministry told ENA.

Because of the increasing capacity of the public, local companies are tending to engage in supplying consumer goods, which he said caused for the decline of local company’s involvement in the export area.

The contribution of the industry sector to the total GDP of the country has reached 21 percent from the previous 15 percent at the beginning of the growth and transformation plan period.

Support and assistance have been given to local companies to address this situation and encourage them engage in the manufacturing sub-sector.

Despite the manufacturing sub-sector has shown improvement, industries are not working with their full capacity because of various reasons, he noted.

Limitations on management, shortage of inputs and absence of modern trading system are the major challenges, according to the head.

“Efforts will be carried out to attract new companies, help inoperative industries commence operation and addressing the shortage of raw cotton.”

In the efforts to extend the production capacity of industries, activities are being underway to raise capacity of industries that have been working with their 70 percent capacity to 85 percent.

The Ministry is trying to help industries working with 50 – 60 percent current production capacity to produce with their 70 percent capacity.

[ENA]

Middle East Investment Increasing

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Investment flow from Middle East countries has increased over the past four years, the Ethiopian Investment Commission said

Middle East FDI which was low before the beginning of the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) period, is increasing in the past four years, Getahun Negash public relations director at the Commission told ENA.

In spite of the age-long relations and connections, Middle East investment has not reached at a desired level, he added.

The government of Ethiopia has understood the region’s potential in terms of investment and is working to attract more investors from there.

Intensive promotion of the country’s investment opportunities, coupled with the fast economic growth and stability has increased Middle East investment during the GTP period.

Some 254 investment projects owned by Saudi Arabia, UAE, Yemen, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman were licensed during those years, of which 35 projects with an aggregate capital of 5.87 billion Birr have become operational.

Derba Cement, the country’s largest cement plant, Saudi Star Agricultural Development Plc and Julphar Pharmaceuticals plant are among the operational projects.

Middle East companies are largely engaged in agriculture, agro-processing and manufacturing sectors, Getahun said.

”Middle East companies are largely engaged in agriculture sector. Next to agriculture, they have taken part in the agro-processing and manufacturing sectors. In agriculture, they are working to get market for their local consumption, plus they are involved in agro-processing activities by adding values in Ethiopia’s agricultural outputs and re-export to their markets. In similar, they have an active participation in the manufacturing sector.’’

Saudi Arabia (112), UAE (56), Yemen (56) and Kuwait (16) are the countries with large number of licensed projects during this period, Getahun stated.

Saudi Arabia is the leading country from the region in terms of number of licensed projects with 112 projects of which 10 have already commenced operation.

These projects with an aggregate capital of 5.4 billion Birr have created 3,604 permanent and temporary jobs. Investments owned by billionaire Sheikh Mohammed al- Amoudi takes the lion’s share of Saudi investment.

‘Derba Cement Factory and Saudi Star Agricultural Development are among the major projects of Saudi investment.

The 351 million USD Derba Cement, with the capacity to produce 8,000 metric tons of cement per day, was inaugurated in February 2012.

UAE is the second largest country with 56 licensed investment projects among which 16 are operational. These projects with 345 million Birr capital created jobs for over 1,000 individuals.

The Julphar Gulf Pharmaceutical Industries plant in Addis Ababa is among the UAE owned investment.

Opened in February 2013 in joint venture with a local company, the facility produces solid and liquid dosage forms of medicines in Ethiopia.

The facility believed to be one of the largest pharmaceutical industries in East Africa has a capacity of producing 25 million bottles of suspension and syrup, 500 million tablets and 200 million capsules per annum.

‘Among the Saudi Arabia investments, Sheik Mohammed Hussein Al Amoudi’s companies take the lion’s share. MIDROC hugely invests in Ethiopia and created employment for a large number of citizens. In similar, United Arab Emirates’ Julphar Pharmaceuticals recently opened a pharmaceutical facility that is able to render the largest injection treatment in East Africa.”

Intensive promotional activities combined with the successive economic growth and security contributed to improvement in Middle East investment, Getahun noted.

Support of the government for companies that are interested to invest in the country and incentives given to companies engaged in priority areas are also causes for the increase, according to him.

The government is working to attract more Middle East investment, since the region is among the promising areas, he remarked.

[WaltaInformationCenter]

Nutri-Dense

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Nutri-Dense was established by Mrs. Alemstehay Greiling with the aim of contributing towards a lasting solution of malnourished children and diabetic patients through the supply of nutritious products.

The business exclusively focuses on the production of nutritious Energy snack Bars and Breakfast Cereal Mix. Major ingredients including Honey, Sesame, Teff and Moringa

Moringa6  Sesame6   Teff6  Honey6

Noticing the low involvement of private sector in the fight against malnutrition, Mrs. Alemtsehay Greiling has become one of the pioneers in establishing a social enterprise to address this issue. This enterprise will be able to not only supply nutritious food while being profitable, to ensure its sustainability, but it will also create employment opportunity for individuals, and a guaranteed market for farmers, priority being given to women.

WE NEED YOUR HELP TO MAKE THIS A SUCCESSFUL CAMPAIGN

Help make it happen for Sustainable Solution for Malnutrition:

https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/sustainable-solution-for-mal-nutrition

Nutri-Dense

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Nutri-Dense was established by Mrs. Alemstehay Greiling with the aim of contributing towards a lasting solution of malnourished children and diabetic patients through the supply of nutritious products.

The business exclusively focuses on the production of nutritious Energy snack Bars and Breakfast Cereal Mix. Major ingredients include Honey, Sesame, Teff and Moringa.

Teff6   Honey6   Moringa6   Sesame6

Noticing the low involvement of private sector in the fight against malnutrition, Mrs. Alemtsehay Greiling has become one of the pioneers in establishing a social enterprise to address this issue. This enterprise will be able to not only supply nutritious food while being profitable, to ensure its sustainability, but it will also create employment opportunity for individuals, and a guaranteed market for farmers, priority being given to women.

WE NEED YOUR HELP TO MAKE THIS A SUCCESSFUL CAMPAIGN

Help make it happen for Sustainable Solution for Malnutrition:

https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/sustainable-solution-for-mal-nutrition


Company Inaugurates First Ever Agri-Food Laboratory

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BLESS Agri Food Laboratory Services PLC launched first ever agricultural products and food testing laboratory. The laboratory is helpful in facilitating the country’s export and making the country more competitive at the global market, the Deputy Minister said.

Speaking on the launching ceremony held yesterday Minister of Communication and Information Technology with the rank of Deputy Prime Minister for Finance and Economic cluster Dr. Debretsion Gebremichael said the laboratory is established at a time when the country is urgently demanding competent laboratories to support the implementation of activities set under the Growth and Transformation Plan 2(GTP2) to ensure food safety, quality and nutritional content. It is vital to test food products and fulfill both local and international requirements, he noted.

Debretsion said the laboratory is the first of its kind in Ethiopia that can provide credible testing services catastrophic chemicals that may be obtained in nuts, cereals and spices due to improper pre and post-harvest handling. “The laboratory will contribute to filling the gap in the link between production in the development and production of safe, nutritious and wholesome food,” he said. It can also benefit producers and exporters by giving them dependable and reliable analytic services helpful to decide on quality and safety parameters to sale their products at a very competitive price, he added.

Company General Manager Hilina Belete on her part said the lab could help the country boost its export by providing testing services for exporters locally and can encourage the food processing industries by relying on their proved quality. The company aims to expand its services to African countries and provide services in the near future, she said. According to her, the lab is at present providing biological, chemical tests and micro nutrient analysis services.

Hilina said the lab would also contribute to the improvement of health in the country by enabling effective chemicals detection in food and agricultural products that could endanger the health of people. “It is also vital to strengthen the country’s effort to be a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) as it is one of the standards for ensuring safety and quality,” she said.

The company, which cost about 80 million Birr, has created job opportunities for 50 people. It began operation with agricultural research and educational institutions in various programs.

[TheEthiopianHerald]

Innovation, Technology-Oriented Economy said Key to Africa’s Transformation

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The African Economic Conference is underway with the theme: “Knowledge and Innovation for Africa’s Transformation’ at United Nations Conference Hall here.

The conference is co-organized by the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), with overriding objective of bringing together experienced and young researchers as well as policy makers to dialogue on diverse issues of Africa’s transformation.

In his opening remark, United Nations Under Secretary General and Executive Secretary of ECA, Carlos Lopes said that the innovations bode well for the future; however, supplemental work is still required to speed up the pace of creation as well as the absorption rate of new technologies and spread it to all sectors of the economies.

“We can actually be net beneficiaries of this focus on the role of information, technology and learning as a determinant of economic performance. We can leapfrog; we can offer frugal innovation,” said Lopes.

He further reiterated that technology has important implications for our ability to identify and exploit opportunities to transform economies and for employment of growing young population.

“In today’s knowledge-driven global economy, innovation and technology-oriented education is vital for sustained economic performance and competitiveness. In practical terms, innovation and technology-oriented education gives our youth critical building blocks to secure their future,” he noted.

Africa Union Commission Chairperson Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma on her part stressed that skills, technology, knowledge and innovation are critical to all areas of African transformation – from the modernization of agriculture to having resilient and effective public health systems in order to fight disease, as everyone sees Ebola today.

“These issues are critical to our Agenda 2063, the fifty-year vision of the Africa we want, as well as the common African Position on the post-2015 development agenda,”Zuma said.

UNDP Resident Representative to Ethiopia, Eugene Owusu said to ensure inclusion and enhance resilience as well as sustain development gains, Africa needs and should significantly invest in knowledge and innovation.

“Here in Ethiopia we are using knowledge and innovation to bring about transformation through targeted interventions that are helping unleash the entrepreneurial spirit of Ethiopians, particularly women and youth,” he noted.

The 2014 report on the Millennium Development Goals was also launched yesterday. Various papers with holding diverse continental issues were presented as part of the conference and plenary sessions held.

[TheEthiopianHerald]

International Conference on Bamboo to be held in Addis Ababa

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An international conference on Ethiopia’s bamboo would be held in Addis Ababa on November 5, 2014, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

The conference is jointly organized by the Chinese based International Network for Bamboo and Rattan and Ministry of Agriculture.

In a press briefing he gave today, Sustainable Land Holding Program Advisor with Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Melaku Tadesse, told journalists that the rich bamboo resource of the country and its stability were the factors that enabled the country to be selected for the conference.

The conference will discuss the policy contents of International Network for Bamboo and Rattan, the role of the private sector in green bamboo development, and the role bamboo plays in basin development.

Although Ethiopia would be handing over its chairmanship at the conference, it would remain a board member as the country makes huge contribution to bamboo development, he said.

Participants of the conference will on November 6, 2014 visit the Africa Bamboo Training and Workshop located at Gefersa locality in Oromia region, it was indicated. A center is going to be established at the sight, according to the advisor.

The center will help participants that come from other African countries for short and long term training exchange experience and establish market network, it was pointed out.

Besides they will be encouraged to produce new products by using their creativity, and favorable situation would be created to make the products available to both local and foreign markets, Melaku stated.

Country Representative for International Network for Bamboo and Rattan, Tesfaye Hunde, on his part said the government is introducing and expanding new technology and sharing the experience of countries that benefit from bamboo to effectively utilize the bamboo resource in the country.

Bamboo plays huge role in consolidating sustainable land utilization and activities that help ensure food security, he added. It would also help improve the livelihood of those engaged in the industry.

Ethiopia has bamboo plantation that covers 1 million hectare, which is 65 percent of the total bamboo plantation in Africa.

[ENA]

Ethiopia and Ireland Signed Agreements on Transport and Trade

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President of Ireland Michael D Higgins has witnessed the signing of three significant bilateral treaties between Ireland and Ethiopia.

The three agreements were signed this morning by minister of state for development, trade promotion and north south co-operation Sean Sherlock.

The signing followed this morning’s meeting between President Higgins and Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn.

A double taxation agreement will encourage the growth of trade and investment between Ireland and Ethiopia.

A bilateral transport agreement will clear the way for direct flights by Ethiopian airlines from June 2015 between Dublin and Addis Ababa.

It will be the first-ever direct scheduled route between Ireland and Africa.

A bilateral co-operation agreement will provide a framework for a five-year development partnership, estimated to be worth €136m, focused on health, nutrition, agriculture and governance.

Speaking after the signing of the treaties, President Higgins said they would act as a catalyst in moving forward to a whole new set of achievements in different areas.

He also said the bilateral treaties would now provide a framework for ever more contact between Ireland and Ethiopia.

[Diplomat]

Green Fuel Solution announce plan to operate in Ethiopia

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Green Fuel Solution, a US-based company, announced plan to generate clean and renewable energy from solid waste in Ethiopia.

While discussing with Ethiopia’s President Mulatu Teshome here today, Company Development Director Marlon Pujol said the company is waiting permission from the government to launch its activity.

If completed soon, the project would be the nation’s second project to generate energy from solid waste, following the landfill being constructed in the capital, Addis Ababa.The nation has been constructing a landfill at Repi where the municipality’s waste has been disposed to generate 50mw power from solid waste, which would make it number one in the continent in terms of generating capacity.

The Director has also explained the company’s desire to produce material used for construction of asphalt roads from the bi-products.The company is also interested in producing refinery equipments and supplying them to other African countries, he added.

The company will implement the project in partnership with G.A. Engineering Association.

The project would help Ethiopia’s efforts to produce clean energy and job creation, President of G.A. Engineering Association Girma Allero said.

Girma said the project will be implemented in collaboration with the state owned Metal and Engineering Corporation.

For his part, President Mulatu said the project matches the country’s policy which promotes clean and renewable energy development.

He affirmed that the government will extend any support the company needs for the operationalization of the project, according to a high level official who attended the meeting.

[ENA]

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