L-R: Ola Energy global chief executive Mazin Binramadan, Ola Energy Kenya GM Millicent Onyonyi during a press briefing at the Nairobi Serena Hotel on October 1, 2019. PHOTO | DIANA NGILA
Summary
- Ola Energy, which rebranded from OiLibya last year, is the local subsidiary of Tamoil Africa Holdings Limited.
- The oil marketer has 189 staff locally.
- Sources had earlier told the Business Daily retail petrol stations re-branded to Ola Energy have experienced significant drops with a corresponding loss in market shares.
Oil marketer Ola Energy (formerly OiLibya) has announced that it
will lay off workers in a voluntary early retirement exercise as part
of its turnaround strategy.
In the announcement made
Tuesday, Ola Energy Kenya General Manager Millicent Onyonyi confirmed
the layoffs but did not disclose how many staff would be affected.
“We are not targeting a specific number of staff. It is based on the applications (for voluntary early retirement),” she said.
She
said in a statement, the voluntary early retirement plan offers a
severance pay equivalent to one-month for every completed service capped
to 20 months, one month salary in lieu of notice, one month salary as a
gift, one month salary compensation for resettlement, medical cover to
the end of the year and an opportunity for the employee to share pension
allowed by the law if they so desire.
Ola Energy,
which rebranded from OiLibya last year, is the local subsidiary of
Tamoil Africa Holdings Limited. The oil marketer has 189 staff locally.
Sources had earlier told the Business Daily retail petrol
stations re-branded to Ola Energy have experienced significant drops
with a corresponding loss in market shares.
Ola Energy, the source said, had threatened to remove dealers that lost sales after the re-branding.
Ms Onyonyi defended plans to send home some workers, saying it was necessary to make the oil marketer agile.
She
blamed a raft of new levies including the 10 per cent import duty
charged against raw materials for the manufacture of lubricants and
those newly imposed by county administrations saying this had stifled
the oil marketer’s business.
She made the comments
during a briefing attended by Ola Energy global Chief Executive Mazin
Binramadan and other top Dubai-based officials of the oil marketer in
Nairobi.
Ms Onyonyi did not provide the criteria of the exercise but confirmed it was underway.
Mr Binramadan replaced Ibrahim Bugaighis as head of the firm’s Africa operations in 2018.
According
to sources, the business is in trouble after it has emerged unit costs
are now higher than gross selling margins. Insiders say the company
seeks to retrench several senior employees and non-performing staff.
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