A leading indigenous local tomato paste manufacturer, Erisco Foods
Limited, has made good its threat of shutting down the $150bn plant and
relocating its manufacturing base to a location outside Nigeria.
The
Chief Executive Officer, Erisco Foods Limited, Chief Eric Umeofia,
announced on Tuesday that the company was winding down operations
preparatory for its final exit from the country.
He said that he
was moving the factory to China where he already had a thriving
business, adding that from there, he would be manufacturing and
exporting tomato paste back to Nigeria, as it was far cheaper doing so
than producing locally.
According to him, 1,500 employees of the
firm will be retrenched in a process that will span six to nine months,
as the company relocates, adding that the
retrenchment, which will take
place in batches, had already commenced with the first batch of workers
being sent home.
After months of complaint about lack of access to
foreign exchange for the purchase of raw materials and machinery, high
cost of running his factory in Nigeria and the influx of imported tomato
paste, Umeofia had issued a 30-day ultimatum that if the issues were
not resolved, he would move his factory outside Nigeria.
The
Erisco Foods CEO stated that he had already incurred a loss of over
N3bn in the past one year and blamed the Central Bank of Nigeria for
withholding foreign exchange from local manufacturers, while approving
same for importers of tomato paste.
He faulted CBN’s declaration
that it had ceased to allocate forex to manufacturers after it floated
the naira, adding, “No bank can pay you forex unless the CBN has
approved the Form ‘M’, which is a form permitting you to import.”
Erisco is not the only tomato paste manufacturer shutting down in Nigeria.
The
Group Vice President, Dangote Industries Limited, Alhaji Sani Dangote,
said in October that the group had stopped tomato paste production at
its $20m factory, which was established in March.
When confronted
with Umeofia’s allegation that the CBN was controlling the allocation of
forex to bank customers, the apex bank’s Director of Corporate
Communications, Mr. Isaac Okoroafor, said the central bank was only
checking the requests for forex to ensure that they were not to import
the 41 items restricted from access to forex.
On the allegation
that some Chinese and Indian firms were favoured in the allocation of
forex above Nigerians, Okoroafor also said some of the firms were
involved in packaging of Nigeria’s frozen fish for export.
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