Kakira sugar packs. Photo/FILE
By Fred Ojambo, Bloomberg
In Summary
- Kakira Sugar spent $75 million expanding cane-crushing and power operations over the past two years.
- The facility will have capacity to produce 20 million litres (5.3 million gallons) of ethanol fuel annually.
- The ethanol (8 per cent to 15 percent) will be blended with gasoline to cut fuel costs
Kakira Sugar Works Ltd,
Uganda’s biggest processor of the sweetener, plans to build an ethanol
plant by the end of 2016 after it spent $75 million expanding
cane-crushing and power operations over the past two years.
The ethanol from the facility
that will have capacity to produce 20 million litres (5.3 million
gallons) annually will be distilled from 85,000 metric tons of molasses,
the result of processing two million tons of cane, Kenneth Musinga
Barungi, an assistant to the company’s general manager, said by e-mail
Thursday.
“Directors are discussing the
design, possible equipment suppliers and costs, with plans for
production to start by mid-December 2015,” he said. Officials visited
India and China for advice on feasibility studies, Barungi said.
Kakira and other producers
currently sell molasses cheaply to distillers of a local gin. The
landlocked nation may produce a surplus of sugar this year, with output
rising 32 per cent to 442,550 tons from a year earlier, according to its
manufacturers’ association. Domestic demand is about 320,000 tons
annually. Uganda consumed 17,000 barrels of petroleum products daily in
2012, according to the United States Energy Information Administration.
The ethanol will be blended with
gasoline to cut fuel costs and the mixture will range from 8 per cent
to 15 per cent, Barungi said. Kakira and other processors of the
sweetener are lobbying the East African nation’s government to pass
policy before production starts, he said.
The company is owned by the Kakira-based Madhvani Group, one of the nation’s leading industrial groups, which is classified by Forbes magazine among the ten biggest family companies in Africa.
The group invested $75 million
since 2012 in Kakira’s cane-crushing facilities and in generating
electricity from bagasse, a cane fiber, Barungi said. It uses 16
megawatts of its 50 megawatts of capacity, selling the remainder to the
national grid, he said.
Uganda’s installed power
capacity is 810 megawatts, according to the Electricity Regulatory
Authority. Eskom Holdings Ltd., the utility that generates about 95
percent of South Africa’s power, had installed capacity of 41,995
megawatts at the end of March, it said on July 11.
No comments:
Post a Comment