A Coca-Cola bottles factory in Kisumu, western Kenya. Coca-Cola plans to
invest $100 million in Kenya over the next five years to improve
infrastructure and launch new products. PHOTO | NMG
Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA), the continent’s largest
soft drinks bottler, said on Wednesday it would invest $100 million in
Kenya over the next five years to improve infrastructure and launch new
products.
The company, which sells and
distributes Coca-Cola Co products in Africa, plans to introduce 50 new
products in Kenya to add to more than 130 existing ones in the country,
local Managing Director Daryl Wilson said in an interview.
“As
the middle-class is (growing)... they are wanting more variety,” he
said, adding the new offerings would include various sugar-free and
flavoured water beverages.
“Kenyan tastes are growing, the need for new brands is growing,” he said.
This
month, the company launched a Ksh7 billion ($69 million) new juice line
at its Nairobi plant. It operates four bottling plants in Kenya.
CCBA’s distribution system includes 300 official distributors reaching across the country of 45 million people.
The company operates in a dozen sub-Saharan African countries including Ethiopia and South Africa.
Kenya
is second in terms of profits to Ethiopia, Wilson said, where the
company has plans to open at least four or five factories in the next
five years.
While Kenya’s economy offers a conducive
business environment, bad rural roads take a toll on vehicles
distributing products, Wilson said.
Another challenge
is electricity, where inconsistent availability of power in some of its
plants has forced it to deploy generators, which are expensive.
Wilson
urged the government to “look at opportunities to reduce (the cost of)
electricity, because it’s a big component of ours.”
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