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South Africa’s Tiger Brands says its new plant to help cut costs, lower prices

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Tiger Brands, South Africa’s biggest food company, says that its 400 million rand ($16 million) peanut butter factory, which opened on Friday, will help it cut costs and give customers more products at lower prices.

Its managing director for culinary, Dumo Mfini, told journalists that the new plant will let the company run two lines for different-sized jars at the same time, instead of just one. The plant is in Krugersdorp, west of Johannesburg, and will make the Black Cat brand.

“We can now produce faster,” Mfini said, adding that the company was becoming more flexible in bringing out new products. In February, the company reported flat to lower operating income for the six months ending March 31.

 

Tiger Brands, which also makes KOO baked beans, Albany bread, and Jungle Oats, says that peanut butter makes up 50%, or 1.7 billion rands, of the country’s overall spreads market. Margarine is not included.

The factory will be able to make about a million bottles of peanut butter every month. It will also lower the group’s costs, which will help it meet customer needs for affordability in a world where prices are high, said Tjaart Kruger, CEO of Tiger Brands.

“Our unit costs will go down because of how we make things here,” Kruger told reporters. Kruger also said that the plant would make more plastic tubs and tubes, which are cheaper ways to package things than glass jars.

After Russia invaded Ukraine and caused more problems in the supply chain linked to the pandemic in 2022, prices for almost all raw materials, energy, and packaging went up, making it hard for companies that make consumer goods around the world. Because of this, companies have raised their prices, but this is hurting customers’ wallets and making them switch from expensive brands to cheaper ones.

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Dangote refinery begins petroleum sales to West Africa

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In an indication to traders that the activities of its mega-refinery might soon disrupt regional fuel markets, Nigeria’s private Dangote Petroleum Refinery has started exporting refined petroleum products to neighbouring West African nations.

According to a Bloomberg story on Tuesday, a tanker had transported a consignment of petrol from the Dangote Petroleum Refinery to seas off the coast of Togo, a nearby West African nation. The article cited data from Vortexa, Kpler, Precise Intelligence, a port report, and a ship-tracking tool.

According to the source, a CL Jane Austen recently departed west after loading over 300,000 barrels from Dangote.

Recall that Mustapha Abdul-Hamid, the chairman of the Ghana National Petroleum Authority, stated last month that the nation is thinking of purchasing petroleum products from the Dangote refinery in order to reduce the approximately $400 million it spends each month on more costly exports from Europe.

Speaking at the OTL Africa Downstream Oil Conference in Lagos, the chairman of NPA, Ghana, said that by eliminating freight expenses, buying from Nigeria instead of Europe will lower the cost of other products and services.

“If the refinery reaches 650,000bpd a day capacity, all that volume cannot be consumed by Nigeria alone, so instead of us importing as we do right now from Rotterdam, it will be much easier for us to import from Nigeria and I believe that will bring down our prices,” Hamid said.

Two weeks ago, it was announced that the refinery would start exporting fuel to Namibia, Angola, and South Africa. Four more African nations—Niger Republic, Chad, Burkina Faso, and Central Africa Republic—had also begun talks with the refinery, it was said.

According to a very reliable source who spoke directly to one of our reporters, the management of the refinery with a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day was in the advanced stages of negotiations with the nations to begin lifting petroleum.

“I can confirm to you that talks are actually at the advanced stage with Ghana, Angola, Namibia, and South Africa, while the initial discussion is coming up with Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, and the Central African Republic,” the source said.

The petroleum product shipment is currently floating off the coast of Lome, which is a well-liked location for ship-to-ship transfers, according to the source.

Furthermore, the final destination of the cargo of the CL Jane Austen is uncertain.

Despite being off Togo, the region is frequently utilised for ship-to-ship transfers, thus the gasoline may eventually be transported elsewhere.

“While the shipment is tiny in the context of the global gasoline market, it signals the ramp-up of Dangote’s production and the potential to export significant volumes of gasoline beyond Nigeria, which could upend regional markets.”

Last month, the refinery sent its first shipment of petrol by sea to Lagos, a neighbouring commercial centre.

Under the regulatory statute, the Federal Government last month terminated the state-owned oil company’s monopoly on purchasing gasoline from the plant for domestic use, but it has permitted the ongoing importation of fuel from the US and Europe.

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Pension withdrawal hits $2.8 billion after reform

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According to South Africa’s tax department, pension withdrawals have increased to 49.6 billion rand ($2.8 billion) in the 11 weeks after a law that permits partial withdrawals before retirement went into force.

On October 11, the South African Revenue Service said that since the reform on September 1, 21.4 billion rand had been disbursed.

The goal of the “two-pot” pension reform is to encourage long-term retirement savings while providing flexibility to members who are experiencing financial difficulties.

It is anticipated to increase the government’s tax revenue and stimulate economic growth in the latter months of 2024.

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