By VICTOR JUMA
In Summary
- The Swedish multinational says it has signed deals with local factories to make its fast-fashion clothing under its famous H&M brand.
- In Africa, H&M only has shops in Egypt, but has talked of plans to open stores in South Africa by next year. The bulk of its shops are in Europe.
- Sourcing of garments from local manufacturers by H&M will offer new demand for the sluggish textile industry whose earnings and production have dropped significantly from its peak in the 1980s.
The world’s second-biggest fashion retailer
Hennes & Mauritz (H&M) will open a manufacturing plant in Kenya
to feed its global empire of more than 3,000 stores in 53 countries.
The Swedish multinational says it has signed deals
with local factories to make its fast-fashion clothing under its famous
H&M brand.
The firm outsources production to about 800
factories in Europe and Asia that are controlled by designers at the
retailer’s head office in Sweden.
Low-cost production in places like Bangladesh
and China has helped H&M cement its position as a top fashion house
and its Kenya operation looks set to benefit local textile manufacturers
who have been hit hard by cheap imports from Asia and second-hand
clothes.
Helena Helmersson, H&M’s head of sustainability, told Reuters that H&M will start producing more clothes in sub-Saharan Africa and has already placed orders in Ethiopia and Kenya.
“We want to expand. It is not about moving capacity from Bangladesh or China,” Helmersson told Reuters.
The Swedish company is one of the biggest buyers
of garments from Bangladesh, where the collapse of the Rana Plaza
factory last April killed more than 1,100 people, drawing global
attention to the poor conditions in which many in Asia work.
In Africa, H&M only has shops in Egypt, but
has talked of plans to open stores in South Africa by next year. The
bulk of its shops are in Europe.
But fashion retailers from South Africa like
Foschini and Edgars will be opening stores in Kenya this year, helped by
the rise in shopping malls that attract well-heeled consumers.
Kenya has seen multi-billion shilling shopping
malls spring up fast as real estate investors and retailers seek to tap
into a growing middle class with growing disposable incomes and a
limited choice of leisure activities.
The sourcing of garments from local manufacturers
by H&M will offer new demand for the sluggish textile industry whose
earnings and production have dropped significantly from its peak in the
1980s.
Statistics from the African Cotton & Textile
Industries Federation shows that the local textile industry peaked in
1984 with 52 mills producing over 70,000 bales and employing more than
42,000 people.
But the industry has declined over the years,
with only 15 mills currently operating at a capacity of between 30 per
cent and 45 per cent.
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