Tuesday, January 16, 2024

THE ATIAK SUGAR DEAL LEAVES A BITTER TASTE IN THE MOUTH

We all know someone like this. You come together as group to contribute to a business venture, but they despite their initial enthusiasm for the project, are reluctant to contribute to the endevour. The rest of you get it off the ground with the little you have managed to put together and what in patient hope for the coming of their contribution.

It doesn’t come and there is always an excuse why. It is beginning to get on your nerves because the defaulting member is benefitting from the project disproportionately to his contribution. You could have let them freeload – after all we are all friends, but the sheer injustice of the situation is beginning to poison the friendship. And the freeloader seems totally unbothered by the situation he has put you people in, oblivious to the risk of jeopardizing the project all together.

Last week the Auditor General released his report for the year that ended in June2023. Wading through the inane stuff that included air supply in local governments, our ballooning public debt, ghost works in government I happened upon a report about our interest in Atiak Sugar Company.

"If lack of capital is a reason for most business failures in Uganda there is no way, absolutely no way, Atiak Sugar Company will collapse...

The project is located in Amuru district, northern Uganda and has the potential to process 1650 tonnes of cane daily for a production of 66,000 tonnes of sugar annually on the 7,900-acre plantation.

 They have struggled to get off the ground, with production being pushed back from 2016 before limited production begun in 2020, but had to be shut down in 2022 for lack of cane to run the plant following a burning of 3000 acres of their fields. Observers think it won’t be until 2025 when they resume operations.

Industry players in private are not surprised by the teething problems the project is suffering as the promoters thought they would circumvent certain key processes in setting up an operation as they had envisaged.

For a project of this magnitude to take almost a decade after its initial commencement to take off is mind boggling.

But maybe not.

Over the last six years government has pumped sh459b into the project in equity and loans through Uganda Development Corporation (UDC). But also an additional sh69b has been received from NAADS (National Agricultural Advisory Services) for such things as slashing, weeding and planting.

But to break it down even further these monies at sh14m a classroom, build about 40,000 classrooms or almost 6,000 primary schools. This would  put a dent in our horrific number of more than 1.4 million kids dropping out of school annually....

These funds, which are more than were allocated to the manufacturing and tourism sector – sh491b, in the last budget, is five times more than government’s commitment to the project. Government is a 40 percent shareholder in the project for which they were supposed to contribute sh80b.

But it gets better.

John Muwanga the Auditor General reported on government’s partners in the project, Horyal Investment Holding Company (HIHC), “There was no evidence to confirm that the private shareholders had provided their capital contribution to the company.”

All I could say was, Wow!

But not only has government given HIHC a blank check to set up this financial black hole, but also was not adequately represented on the board. Government has only one instead of two board members. This kind of negligence is criminal.

To simplify several of us got together raised money and then handed over the money to the one among us who has not contributed to the business and we are not bothered what he is doing.

Where is the incentive for Atiak to work?  The promoters are already being paid hand over fist before the project starts, why suffer with staffing and operations, when we can just be paid for twiddling our thumbs?

I would love to be wrong but it is not rocket science to see what is going to happen.

"The promoters will throw their hands up in the air in defeat, walk away, government will take over the project to make a show of trying to recoup their investment and eventually give up as well, let the bush grow back and let the machines rust away....

It goes without saying that this country cannot afford this kind of waste on such an industrial scale.

Government actions in this project make one wonder whether they really wanted the project to succeed. If they really wanted it to succeed, the obvious thing to do would be to contract someone who has experience in this business, pay them probably a tenth of what they have already shoveled into this doomed project and just maybe we would have sugar from northern Uganda within a finite time.

And now its on to the next scandal.

 


 

 

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