AB-InBev to Expand in Tanzania With New $100 Million Brewery



Lazma povu liwatoke kaka unajua Magu anawatenda vibaya muno. Ukiacha AB Inbev, Heineken nao wako mbioni kuja. Hii negative coverage yao inausishwa na sakata la makaa ya mawe kwa ajili ya viwanda vya saruji.

Kama mnakumbuka vizuri ile ban ya makaa ya mawe ya kutoka Afrika Kusini ilisababisha Dangote kulalamika na kupewa coal deposits Kiwira ama Mchuchuma. Sasa basi Magu alimpa under condition ajenge mining plant within a fixed time na hii kupelekea kusimamisha mradi wake wa saruji Kenya.

Wapuuzi wanaoponda humu ndani hawajui hatua ya Magu ku-ban uingizaji wa makaa ya mawe toka nje imesababisha nini nchini? Kiufupi imetengeneza mahitaji ya makaa ya mawe maana viwanda vya saruji mbali na kutumia makaa ya mawe kwa nishati hutumia pia fly ash kama ingredient ya kutengenezea cement.

As a result Kibo mining wanaanza kujenga kiwanda cha kuzalisha umeme mbali ya mgodi wa makaa wa mawe. hili lisingewezekana kama magu asingezuia uingizaji wa makaa ya mawe toka South Africa. Mchina wa Mchuchuma na Liganga nao wamechimbwa biti kuwekeza au kunyang'anywa machimbo. Wanakuja mbio.

Pili Dangote amepelekewa gas mpaka kiwandani kuona hivyo Mchina nae kaja kuwekeza Tanga hatujakaa vizuri Mpakistan nae kaja na juzi tu Mu-irish nae kaja, halafu wote ni mega investments (in total over 20mln tonnes of cement in next 5 years).

Hii yote ni kutokana na massive infrastructures Magu anazowekeza
wanaona electrical SGR at 160km/h pili Stiegler's Gorge hydropower project ukiachilia mbali mradi wa Bagamoyo na wa SGR toka Mtwara on the Indian Ocean to the port of Mbamba Bay on Lake Nyasa ambao feasibility yake imeanza na mradi utatangazwa pretty soon. Kwanini wasije?

Mradi wa mbolea wa Ferostaal Lindi nao huo waja ukiacha na mingine chungu nzima. Right now most clinker for cement production in the EA comes from Tanzania as it has the largest deposit of limestone and the same is happening fast with steel, coal and gas aside several factories. lazma povu liwatoke some hapa.



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mkuu hii kitu ifungulie thread. Imesimama vizuri sana. Imebidi nikae usiku niisome vizuri. Wakenya wakae mkao wa mshangao
 
mkuu hii kitu ifungulie thread. Imesimama vizuri sana. Imebidi nikae usiku niisome vizuri. Wakenya wakae mkao wa mshangao

Nitaifungulia, ila povu liliwatoka jamaa inaonyesha jinsi walivyo wanachuki dhidi yetu. tuwe waangalifu sana na hawa jamaa. Uzuri Magu anawajua!
 
Ab Inbev’s $100m investment in Tanzania
By Reuters
23 March 2018 | 3:36 am


the Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB INBEV) logo at the entrance of the offices ahead of a press conference on the 2015 year results of brewery group Anheuser-Busch InBev, in Leuven.<br />Coca-Cola intends to buy the stake global beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev holds in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa, the two companies announced on October 11, 2016. The proposed deal follows ABI’s mega-takeover of SABMiller to create the world’s biggest beer company. That buyout allowed the the Belgian-Brazilian maker of Budweiser and Stella Artois to recover the stake its British-South African rival held in Coca-Cola’s African subsidiary.<br />/ AFP PHOTO / BELGA / BRUNO FAHY

AB InBev, which owns a majority stake in Tanzania Breweries Limited, the country’s biggest brewer, will invest $100 million in a new beer plant in the administrative capital Dodoma, the president’s office announced.


President John Magufuli on Monday chaired a day-long meeting with major foreign and local investors and gave government ministers a seven-day ultimatum to resolve investor concerns.

“I want to assure you that my government does not hate business people – we like them and we will support them … this is the right time to do business (in Tanzania), but you must pay your taxes,” the president’s office quoted Magufuli as telling investors.

Ab Inbev’s $100m investment in Tanzania
 
$100m plant in Tanzania to stir up competition in beer market
Monday March 26 2018


The ongoing construction of a new brewery in Kisumu, Kenya. Anheuser-Busch InBev NV (AB-InBev) — the world’s largest brewer — is planning to build a $100 million brewery in Dodoma, Tanzania. PHOTO | NMG

In Summary
  • AB-InBev’s entry into the region comes at a time key players — Diageo, Heineken and Castel Group — are either struggling to protect their market share or increase their presence.
  • The plan by AB-InBev to invest in a brewery could be a game-changer in the regional market, where focus is shifting away from premium beer market that has largely maintained flat growth to low-end beer brands and spirits.


By NJIRAINI MUCHIRA
More by this Author
East Africa’s beer market is set for interesting times with reports that Anheuser-Busch InBev NV (AB-InBev) — the world’s largest brewer — is planning to build a $100 million brewery in Dodoma, Tanzania.

AB-InBev’s entry into the region comes at a time key players — Diageo, Heineken and Castel Group — are either struggling to protect their market share or increase their presence.

Indeed, as global beer consumption declines in other regions, in Africa consumption has been steady, averaging four per cent between 2012 and 2014, and is projected to average five per cent for the period from 2015 to 2020, according to market research firm Canadean.

Bloomberg this week reported that AB-InBev has set in motion plans for a new plant after a meeting between President John Magufuli and Ricardo Tadeu, its Africa boss.

The decision by the company, which entered Africa in 2016 after the acquisition of SABMiller at a cost of $100 billion, to invest in a plant that will anchor its expansion in the region did not come as a surprise. The company has been recording double-digit growth in volumes.

“Our beer volumes grew double digit in the majority of the countries in which we operate in Africa — Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia — as we continue to expand our offerings to consumers through affordability and premiumisation strategies,” said the company in its 2017 financial report.

Shift from premium beer

In East Africa, AB-InBev has a strong presence, controlling over 75 per cent of the Tanzania market through Tanzania Breweries Ltd, while in Uganda it is seeking to increase its market share through its local subsidiary Nile Brewery, which controls about 60 per cent of the market.

In Kenya, Diageo through East Africa Breweries Ltd (EABL) in which it has a 50.02 per cent stake, continues to dominate the market. The Kenyan market accounts for 74 per cent of the EABL business, while in Uganda it accounts for 17 per cent market share and and 9 per cent in Tanzania.

The plan by AB-InBev to invest in a brewery could be a game-changer in the regional market, where focus is shifting away from premium beer market that has largely maintained flat growth to low-end beer brands and spirits.

AB-InBev says its growth is rooted in the low-end segment of the market that is currently largely served by traditional brews and informal beer traders who have led to the explosion of illicit alcohol.

In Kenya, it is estimated that 58 per cent of all pure alcohol consumed is in the informal market while in Tanzania it is estimated at 65 per cent and Uganda 70 per cent.

The company plans to use local ingredients like sorghum, barley, maize and cassava to make low-end beer that will enable it capture a bigger market.

“We need to develop our mainstream beer, make it affordable enough to tap into the informal beer market, not only informal beer but informal alcohol in general that you have in those markets,” said Mr Tadeu.

He added that in many African countries people drink between nine and 11 litres of commercially produced beer per capita annually, against a global average per capita rate of 44 litres per year. South Africa leads in beer consumption in Africa, with a per capita consumption of 80 litres.

The fact that growth is in the low-end of the market is evident considering that EABL is investing $150 million in a new plant in Kisumu to manufacture Senator Keg using sorghum sourced from the local community.

The plant, which is scheduled for completion next year, will ensure the company maintains the growth of the low-end beer market has significantly maintained growth at a time when mainstream beers are on flat trajectory.

According to EABL half year results for the period ending December 2017, the company saw it premium beer volumes decline by 13 per cent, mainstream by seven per cent while emerging segment grew by 10 per cent.

Low-end beer wars afoot as largest brewer sets up shop

MY TAKE
Market share of EABL in Tanzania has shrunk from 15% to 9% and with the entrance of another Brewery in Dodoma we will be reading 1% market share. while TBL has a market share of 78% in Tanzania, EABL has 74% market share.

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