Kenyan logistics firm, Atlas Development, plans to spend Sh916
million ($10 million) in the expansion of its business across west and
north Africa.
Atlas Development chief executive
officer, Mr Carl Esprey, said the aim is to increase profit margins
through its business in Kenya and new acquisitions.
“Opportunities
to add services are being sought primarily via acquisition and a number
of complementary opportunities are currently being evaluated that would
provide additional revenue,” said Mr Esprey.
The
firm, whose focus is mining, oil and gas industry, is eyeing robust
growth having successfully expanded from Kenya and Ethiopia into
Mozambique, Tanzania and Djibouti.
At
the moment, Atlas is preparing to take its staff to north Africa after
it won a contract with an oil and gas company in the region. The company
is set to provide engineering, security and risk advisory in western
Sahara.
“We operate across a number
of sectors, oil and gas, mining, geothermal and infrastructure and I
believe Atlas Development is ideally positioned to implement
consolidation in the sector and region, targeting long-term visible
revenues and stable margins,” said Mr Esprey last week.
STRONG HISTORY
Atlas
Development, formerly known as Africa Oilfields Logistics Company, is
listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange and the London Stock
Exchange. The cross-listing makes Atlas a very attractive counter to
both local and international investors.
Last
year, Atlas started the construction of a Sh180 million ($2 million)
logistics centre in oil-rich Lokichar, in Turkana County.
The
centre, based in an oil extraction region, would help companies and the
government operate more efficiently across Turkana basin.
In
the past year, Atlas has invested about Sh1.4 billion ($15 million) in
Kenya and it plans to pump more than Sh4.5 billion ($ 50 million) in the
region over the next five years.
Atlas
Development first entered Kenya through the acquisition of a 49 per
cent stake in Ardan Risk and Support Services for $4 million (about
Sh356 million) in August 2013.
Ardan
Risk and Support Services had been operating in Kenya since 2008,
servicing big explorers — Tullow Oil and Africa Oil — which have a
strong history and success rate in drilling.
African
Oilfield Logistics bought in October the remaining 51 per cent stake in
Ardan for an undisclosed amount, and the shareholders later agreed to
rebrand to Atlas and then list on the Nairobi bourse.
Atlas says it chose to have a base in Kenya because the country is the business centre of East Africa.
“East Africa is one of the fastest growing regions in the world.
Some
estimate that there is up to $68 billion (about Sh6 trillion) worth of
projects under construction in the region ranging from civil engineering
and infrastructure to resource development,” said Mr Esprey.
COMPETITIVE FORCES
Currently,
the company has 1,000 employees, 700 of whom work in Kenya. Out of
these, 670 are Kenyans, with four holding managerial positions. The rest
of its workforce is spread in Ethiopia, Djibouti, Mozambique and
Tanzania.
Companies have been
trooping into the country confident that the oil, gas and mining
industries bear handsome returns, although exploration is at the early
stages.
Atlas expects competitors to
enter into the profitable business but it notes that its listing on the
Nairobi bourse gives it a head start.
“Any
world-class industry will always be subject to competitive forces. We
believe our first mover advantage coupled with our commitment to
international standards provide a key differentiator for us,” said the
CEO.
Other local companies involved
in exploration are TransCentury and KK Securities, which have benefited
from servicing oil and gas firms.
TransCentury
constructs access roads and other infrastructure for Tullow Oil through
its subsidiary, Civicon, while KK Securities provides personnel.
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