Jay Ireland, president and CEO of General Electric Africa. Photo/FILE
By MWAURA KIMANI
In Summary
About Jay Ireland
- Ireland is the president and chief executive of GE Africa.
- He is also a member of its corporate executive council.
- Prior to this appointment, he led GE Asset Management (GEAM), a global investment firm with about $120 billion in assets, including portfolios for institutional investors around the world as well as those of GE’s US employee pension and benefits plans.
- GE’s products and services range from aircraft engines, power generation, water processing and household appliances to medical imaging, business and consumer financing and industrial products.
- It serves customers in more than 100 countries.
General Electric, the largest US
conglomerate upgraded its Nairobi office early this year to a regional
hub serving its sub-Saharan Africa business.
Over the past one year, the manufacturer of
large-scale industrial products has also sealed several deals on the
continent as its seeks more opportunities in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and
Rwanda.
Mwaura Kimani spoke to the president and CEO
of GE Africa, Jay Ireland on doing business in the region and the firm’s
strategy for the continent.
---------------------------------------------
What is GE’s strategy for East Africa and what should the region expect?
We set up our headquarters in Nairobi based on the
realisation that we needed a larger presence in East Africa. Our focus
is healthcare and energy projects. We plan to invest over $100 million
in two wind power projects in Kenya starting next year.
We are in the final stages of negotiations with
Kenya Power on a Power Purchase Agreement and hope to break ground next
year. The plan is to generate close to 150MW in projects at Kinangop,
central Kenya.
In Tanzania, our focus is on power projects
especially on natural gas. In Uganda, we do not have a presence yet but
we are looking at it come 2013.
In Kenya some of our biggest customers are Kenya
Airways and Rift Valley Railways to whom we supply engines. Across East
Africa, we are increasing our investments in medical equipment as well
as supplying jet engines for companies like RwandAir and other regional
airlines.
Most African countries have huge
infrastructure plans. Given that such projects are capital intensive,
where will the funds come from?
In Africa, the traditional financiers of such
projects have been development institutions like the World Bank and IMF.
Now we are seeing global as well as local banks getting involved.
The next step is to see private equity and
sovereign funds getting on board. Pension funds too are changing focus
and financing big infrastructure projects. It is no longer just a
government-sponsored initiative; more private firms are coming up.
Human capital is becoming the arsenal for
growth and the single tool each company needs to navigate the business
terrain. Where are the skills gaps in Africa?
With growing investments on the continent, there
is a need to build capacity. We have good luck in pulling
business-oriented people together but there is a need for more
investments in the hard technical stuff.
Governments have to take the responsibility of
educating their people up to a certain level, say secondary school.
Private companies can then enlist these graduates and train them in
specific skills. Governments need to work alongside the private sector.
How have trade risks and integration impacted on the business environment?
Continued integration is important for growth. Businessmen in West and South Africa would like to see more of that.
Trade barriers remain a hindrance. For example, it
takes two weeks to ship goods from Nigeria to Ghana — that’s got to get
better.
But regarding returns on projects — the political
and business and credit risks are the same as everywhere else. You can
lose money in Africa just as much as you can anywhere else, but you can
also make a lot of money here. The challenge is getting investors to
understand how to price the risk appropriately.
What sectors will drive growth in Africa in coming years?
Consumer business is the sector to watch.
Infrastructure also looks set to play a big part. For example, there is
great demand for power generation in sub-Saharan Africa. Mining, oil and
gas is East Africa’s next growth frontier; the potential is huge. A
growing middle-class means companies must produce more, and more goods
have to be shipped in.
What is your biggest worry as a businessman with huge investments in Africa?
Some of the things that must improve is infrastructure. We need to see growth across countries especially with regard to electricity and logistical networks. Also important is transparency, rule of law and a reduction in corruption. This will create a favourable environment for businesses to thrive. Another big concern is lack of enough well trained technical people.
Some of the things that must improve is infrastructure. We need to see growth across countries especially with regard to electricity and logistical networks. Also important is transparency, rule of law and a reduction in corruption. This will create a favourable environment for businesses to thrive. Another big concern is lack of enough well trained technical people.
In Africa, political risk is also an issue. For
us, the biggest worry is not something drastic like violence happening
and shutting down everything but new governments coming in and changing
everything say with nationalisation laws.
Kenya holds its election next year, an
event which is of interest to business and households in the East
African region, at least following a botched poll in 2008 that triggered
violence. How worried are you about the near-term outlook? Are some
companies holding back on decisions?
Usually, you plan for the worst. Slowdowns around
elections happens in every country. In the Ghana elections last week,
everything came to a standstill. It’s not just an African thing. What
happened in Kenya was awful but from a business perspective, we are not
in the consumer business, and the economy kept going, despite the drop
in tourism and other sectors.
Just don’t change the laws dramatically — businesses want stability.
The business community continues through elections
across countries. That’s what delivers growth. As a business you plan
for the worst and hope for the best. Neither Kenya, nor East Africa nor
the rest of the world can afford a repeat of that
No comments :
Post a Comment