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DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. - Business - Nairaland

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DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by mercyville: 5:17pm On Mar 13, 2016
The scarcity of foreign exchange has forced some manufacturers to look inwards for raw materials, investigation has shown.

Manufacturers who spoke to our correspondent said they had embarked on urgent search for raw materials and substitutes that could be sourced locally because access to forex through the official route was near impossible while getting it through the black market was very expensive.

The fall in global oil prices has weakened the naira against the dollar while the Central Bank of Nigeria maintains an official exchange rate of N197 to a dollar.

The CBN later announced the closure of its official forex window, the Retail Dutch Auction System and Wholesale Dutch Auction System and followed the action by banning importers of 41 items from accessing forex at the official market, an action, which further caused the naira to plummet.

The bank had also in August 2015 barred banks from accepting cash deposits into domiciliary accounts as a measure aimed at preventing fraud and round tripping.

But in January 2016, the apex bank lifted the ban on lodgements into domiciliary accounts while announcing that it had stopped the sale of forex to over 2000 bureau de change operators nationwide.

The action by the CBN fuelled speculation, which caused one dollar to exchange for as high as N391 at the parallel market as of Thursday, February 18.

The dollar had further increased to N400 before the naira firmed up against it on Monday and Tuesday, February 21 and 22 to exchange for N371 and N310 respectively.

A master brewer of wines, Mr. Linus Kotey, said that his company had started doing everything to find local substitutes instead of waiting for foreign exchange.

According to Kotey, who is a biochemist and the Chief Executive Officer, PEL Extracts Limited, although the raw materials for wine are locally sourced, some of the packaging materials are imported.

“We are working hard to see if we can find locally sourced packaging materials or substitutes for the current packaging that we have,” he explained.

Also, Diageo, the parent company of Guinness, is targeting 70 per cent local raw materials by 2017, the Corporate Communications Manager, Guinness, Olayinka Edmond, told our correspondent.

According to her, the raw materials for one of the firm’s brands, Orijin Bitters, are 100 per cent locally sourced.

Similarly, an agro investor and exporter, Mr. Abiodun Oladapo, told our correspondent that the firm had in the past one month been substituting soya beans for its imported feed mill.

In the same vein, the Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Chemstar Paints Industries, Mr. Emmanuel Awode, said the firm was scouting around for local substitutes for its paint materials.

He said, “The dollar scarcity is particularly hard on the paint industry because over 70 per cent of our raw materials are imported, but we are looking around for local substitutes.”

The Chairman, BUA Group, Abdulsamad Rabiu, in a statement made available to our correspondent, said that in the last three years, the firm had gradually divested from business areas that were largely dependent on foreign exchange in favour of businesses whose raw materials could be sourced at least 90 per cent locally

He said, “We are fully concentrating on our core business including agriculture, mining and manufacturing that are less forex-dependent.”

The President, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, Dr. Frank Jacobs, had earlier called on members of the association to focus on local sourcing of raw materials in view of the forex control and its challenges for the sector.


http://www.punchng.com/dollar-scarcity-manufacturers-turn-to-local-raw-materials/

18 Likes 5 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by slimfit1(m): 5:23pm On Mar 13, 2016
Common sense is kicking in finally. How did we let our lives depend on foreign things and these people ban our product or avoid it when we export. However, brave decision by this government the right one as well.

240 Likes 13 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by ziccoit: 5:26pm On Mar 13, 2016
So these people knew about local sources of raw materials yet engaged in importations.

77 Likes 2 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Nobody: 5:27pm On Mar 13, 2016
I'd loved to laff to dix buh can't

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by chiefolododo(m): 5:29pm On Mar 13, 2016
Eyah sorry
Souljeezy:
I'd loved to laff to dix buh can't

16 Likes 3 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by modath(f): 5:30pm On Mar 13, 2016
The possibillity of a country that is solely & wholly import dependent to ever aspire to be a great nation is between zero & zilch......


Convulsing, cursing, crying..etc won't stop this present administration from weaning Nigerians off that state of mind, sooner people get with the programme , adjust accordingly & take the hard times in their stride the better... cool


*caveat*.. everyone can feel the heat but one's attitude will make one see things either half empty or half full!!

120 Likes 9 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Nobody: 5:36pm On Mar 13, 2016
Dollar scarcity: Manufacturers turn to local raw
materials
March 13, 2016
    

The scarcity of foreign exchange has forced some manufacturers to look inwards for raw materials, investigation has shown. Manufacturers who spoke to our correspondent
said they had embarked on urgent search for raw materials and substitutes that could be sourced locally because access to forex through the official route was near impossible while getting it through the black market was very expensive.

The fall in global oil prices has weakened the naira against the dollar while the Central Bank of Nigeria maintains an official exchange rate of N197 to a dollar. The CBN later announced the closure of its official forex window, the Retail Dutch Auction System and Wholesale Dutch Auction System and followed the
action by banning importers of 41 items from
accessing forex at the official market, an action,
which further caused the naira to plummet.
The bank had also in August 2015 barred banks
from accepting cash deposits into domiciliary
accounts as a measure aimed at preventing fraud and round tripping.

But in January 2016, the apex bank lifted the ban on lodgements into domiciliary accounts while announcing that it had stopped the sale of forex to over 2000 bureau de change operators nationwide. The action by the CBN fuelled speculation, which caused one dollar to exchange for as high as N391 at the parallel market as of Thursday, February 18. The dollar had further increased to N400 before the naira firmed up against it on Monday and Tuesday,
February 21 and 22 to exchange for N371 and
N310 respectively.

A master brewer of wines, Mr. Linus Kotey, said
that his company had started doing everything to find local substitutes instead of waiting for foreign exchange. According to Kotey, who is a biochemist and the Chief Executive Officer, PEL Extracts Limited, although the raw materials for wine are locally sourced, some of the packaging materials are imported. “We are working hard to see if we can find locally
sourced packaging materials or substitutes for the current packaging that we have,” he explained. Also, Diageo, the parent company of Guinness, is targeting 70 per cent local raw materials by 2017, the Corporate Communications Manager, Guinness,
Olayinka Edmond, told our correspondent.

According to her, the raw materials for one of the firm’s brands, Orijin Bitters, are 100 per cent locally sourced. Similarly, an agro investor and exporter, Mr. Abiodun Oladapo, told our correspondent that the firm had in the past one month been substituting soya beans for its imported feed mill. In the same vein, the Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Chemstar Paints Industries,
Mr. Emmanuel Awode, said the firm was scouting around for local substitutes for its paint materials. He said, “The dollar scarcity is particularly hard on the paint industry because over 70 per cent of our raw materials are imported, but we are looking around for local substitutes.”

The Chairman, BUA Group, Abdulsamad Rabiu, in a statement made available to our correspondent, said that in the last three years, the firm had gradually divested from business areas that were largely dependent on foreign exchange in favour of businesses whose raw materials could be sourced
at least 90 per cent locally He said, “We are fully concentrating on our core business including agriculture, mining and manufacturing that are less forex-dependent.”

The President, Manufacturers Association of
Nigeria, Dr. Frank Jacobs, had earlier called on
members of the association to focus on local
sourcing of raw materials in view of the forex
control and its challenges for the sector.


http://www.punchng.com/dollar-scarcity-manufacturers-turn-to-local-raw-materials/

1 Like

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Nobody: 5:36pm On Mar 13, 2016
front page
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by mercyville: 6:22pm On Mar 13, 2016
tuale4u:
front page
lalasticlala
lalasticlala

lalasticlala

where are you now?

1 Like

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by kennyman2000(m): 8:06pm On Mar 13, 2016
Hmmmm
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Adesiji77: 10:06pm On Mar 13, 2016
Way to go...

Cc: lalasticlala, dominique, Mynd44

1 Like 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by mercyville: 10:08pm On Mar 13, 2016
Business Business & Economy Industrial sector records N8.9tn output March 13, 2016      1340 The manufacturing sector recorded an increase of N289bn in its output from N8.68tn in 2014 to N8.94tn at the end of December 2015, figures obtained from the National Bureau of Statistics have revealed. According to the NBS, there are 13 activities in the manufacturing sector made up of oil refining; cement; food, beverages and tobacco; textile, apparel and footwear; wood and wood products; pulp and paper products; chemical and pharmaceutical products. Others are non-metallic products, plastic and rubber products; electrical and electronic, basic metal and iron and steel; motor vehicles and assembly; and other manufacturing. An analysis of the output for the manufacturing sector showed that despite the harsh operating environment, which had led to massive job losses and closure of some industries, the sector continued to show resilience. Apart from oil refining and other manufacturing activities, which recorded a decline of N137.79bn and N3.39bn from N385.81bn and N434.49bn to N248.02bn and N431.1bn respectively, other activities in the sector experienced some level of growth. For instance, there was an increase of N145.32bn in the cement industry from N604.61bn in 2014 to N749.93bn, while the food, textile, wood and paper products industries rose from N4.24tn, N1.81tn, N238.5bn and N59.92bn to N4.29tn, N1.87tn, N259.25bn and N66.09bn, respectively. The pharmaceutical industry recorded N35.51bn increase in output from N154.61bn to N190.12bn while non-metallic products, plastics, electrical, iron and steel, as well as motor vehicles also grew from N259.28bn, N221.95b, N5.75b, N195.76bn and N67.14bn to N315.59bn, N267.16bn, N6.02bn, N207.3bn and N70.05bn in that order. In terms of the quarterly performance for the manufacturing sector, the NBS report said, “Nominal growth of manufacturing in the fourth quarter of 2015 was recorded at 6.93 per cent year-on- year, 12.19 per cent points lower than the 19.12 per cent recorded in the corresponding period of 2014 partly as a result of higher operating costs. “Growth was 2.13 per cent points higher than the third quarter of 2015 which was recorded at 4.8 per cent. On a quarter on quarter basis, the sector grew by 0.33 per cent.” It said the contribution of the manufacturing sector to total economic output was 9.09 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2015, lower than the 9.11 per cent recorded in the corresponding period of 2014, and 9.67 per cent in the third quarter of 2015. Commenting on the output of the sector, analysts said despite the resilience showed by the sector in 2015, there was need for government to come up with a well-articulated industrial strategy that would assist in addressing the structural challenges which had made the operating environment hostile. A former Managing Director, Unity Bank Plc, Mr Rislanudeeen Muhammed, told our correspondent that while incentives for manufacturing were already in place, there was a need for cohesion of policies to achieve the needed impact. Muhammed, who is also the CEO of Safur Investments Limited, said, “There is no way that you can grow an economy without a well- articulated development strategy. “This is the best time that we need to look ourselves and come up with a synchronised and excellent structure that facilitates cohesion of policy among the Federal Ministry of Finance, National Planning Commission, the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Debt Management Office and the Office of the Economic Adviser to the President.” Also, the President, Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr. Tony Ejinkeonye, told our correspondent that while the tough operating environment had led to the closure of so many companies, the uncertainty in the foreign exchange market, infrastructure deficit and the absence of adequate incentives to attract investors into key sectors of the economy needed to be addressed. He said, “The Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry has made it known to the government that the issue of power and energy must be urgently addressed in order to promote industry, boost productivity, and attract both foreign and local direct investment. “Power and energy sufficiency is the fulcrum of any meaningful development of the economy. This is the time for us as a nation to start implementing consistent policies geared towards attracting investments that will revitalise our industries.” He said the that the nation’s economic growth rate, which had fallen from an average of five per cent two years ago to about 2.71 per cent, was as a result of the prevailing problems facing the country.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Nobody: 10:28pm On Mar 13, 2016
Nice move but it won't solve the problem for those in the Technology World.
INNOSON don't produce computer chips

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by seunshrek(m): 10:29pm On Mar 13, 2016
Best way to grow the naira

11 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Generalkorex(m): 10:29pm On Mar 13, 2016
Nice one
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Flashh: 10:30pm On Mar 13, 2016
Hope it'll work out.

7 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by datola: 10:30pm On Mar 13, 2016
Good!

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by abumeinben(m): 10:30pm On Mar 13, 2016
ziccoit:
So these people knew about local sources of raw materials yet engaged in importations.

But somebody recently imported grass from Brazil to feed cows.
And then the cows be like...we feed on foreign legumes grin

41 Likes 2 Shares

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by jamex93(m): 10:30pm On Mar 13, 2016
so una no want de use local materials before abi

4 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by HighKing01(m): 10:31pm On Mar 13, 2016
Wayo govt
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by tushbobo(m): 10:32pm On Mar 13, 2016
Local materials can be developed into international standards.

15 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by bolt000(m): 10:32pm On Mar 13, 2016
lol
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Dinocarex(m): 10:32pm On Mar 13, 2016
Booked!!!
Will comment when I wake
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by cole265(m): 10:33pm On Mar 13, 2016
cheesy grin
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by crownwealth: 10:33pm On Mar 13, 2016
fraud alert!
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by DaFlash: 10:33pm On Mar 13, 2016
F...U...C...K DOLLAR


SAI BABA cool cool cool

20 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by Nobody: 10:33pm On Mar 13, 2016
I no dey comment
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by youngguru23(m): 10:33pm On Mar 13, 2016
Mtcheeeew
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by seunaj: 10:34pm On Mar 13, 2016
Buy Nigeria grow Nigeria u nogo hear, but now u wouldn't have a choice.

9 Likes

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by softtouch2(m): 10:34pm On Mar 13, 2016
Good move.
Better for us to learn fast, so that we won't become like Greece. Greece was once a very rich country. She was importing everything, until she became bankrupt.

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by adonbilivit: 10:34pm On Mar 13, 2016
Re: DOLLAR SCARCITY:manufacturers turn to local raw materials. by wharley01(m): 10:34pm On Mar 13, 2016
Am coming, chating with my gf.

**modified***

now, this should be probed, why were you not using local material before. Magu!! Magu!! Another corruption case here ooo cheesy

5 Likes

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