A West Kenya Sugar truck in Kakamega town transports cane to the
miller’s factory. West Kenya Sugar Company was Thursday accused of
violating its licence when Kenya Sugar Board officials appeared before
the parliamentary committee on agriculture. PHOTO/FILE
West Kenya Sugar Company was Thursday accused of
violating its licence when Kenya Sugar Board officials appeared before
the parliamentary committee on agriculture.
Board chief executive Rosemary M’kok said the firm was registered to start work towards establishing a mill and developing cane.
“Registration is not an authority to start operations,” Ms M’kok said. “They have no authority to harvest cane.”
She
said West Kenya moved to court to challenge the matter after the
regulators held a meeting with millers in Western Kenya region to revoke
its licence.
“We cannot act on the matter currently because West Kenya took us to court for unfair licensing before we could revoke its licence,” Ms Mkok added.
“We cannot act on the matter currently because West Kenya took us to court for unfair licensing before we could revoke its licence,” Ms Mkok added.
M’kok said the cane industry
was facing a tough time that had put Kenya’s cane production rate at
$1,000/tonne. This is way lower than their competitors such as Swaziland
and North Sudan that produce cane at $350/tonne.
The Agriculture committee hit out at the sugar board saying this is one of the issues threatening to cripple the industry.
“The
sugar board should stop licensing factories until the industry crisis
is resolved,” said Mr Adan Mohamed Noor, the committee chair. “We are
way behind in privatisation even as the expiry of Comesa safeguards in
February next year loom.”
Squabbles over cane
harvesting zones have put the industry at risk as a Comesa safeguard
deadline draws nearer, with Mumias Sugar Company claiming to have lost
Sh1.26 billion through cane poaching.
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