Summary
- The deal adds to its purchase of Naivasha-based South Lake Medical Centre for Sh100 million last year in partnership with other institutional investors, including Johnson & Johnson.
- Inqo, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE), says the latest investment has seen it enter the natural insecticide market which is undersupplied.
South African firm Inqo Investments has bought a stake in
Kentegra Biotechnology Holdings, one of the six companies growing
pyrethrum in Kenya for an undisclosed amount.
The deal
adds to its purchase of Naivasha-based South Lake Medical Centre for
Sh100 million last year in partnership with other institutional
investors, including Johnson & Johnson.
Inqo, which
is listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE), says the latest
investment has seen it enter the natural insecticide market which is
undersupplied.
The chrysanthemum flowers must be grown in specific conditions to produce pyrethrum.
These conditions are found in a few places around the world, predominantly East Africa (Uganda, Rwanda, and Kenya) and Tasmania.
“Inqo, the social impact investment company … announced an
investment in Kentegra Biotechnology Holdings LLC, a Kenyan based
biotechnology company producing the natural insecticide pyrethrum,” the
company said in a market update.
It noted that the
current natural or organic pyrethrum market is constrained by supply due
to the specific conditions required to grow and produce pyrethrum.
“Currently
demand is predominantly from the home biocide market but with synthetic
pesticides for agricultural use increasingly regulated due to their
negative environmental impact, this market is also likely to expand,”
Inqo said.
Kentegra produces pyrethrum, a natural
active ingredient from the chrysanthemum flower, for use in the home
biocide, agricultural and pharmaceutical pesticide markets.
The US firm has established relationships with buyers in Europe, Africa and Asia.
With
ideal growing conditions, Kenya was once the largest producer of
pyrethrum in the world until poor management and synthetic alternatives
led to a major decline in the nationalised industry in the early 2000s.
In
2013, the Kenyan government liberalised the pyrethrum sector in a
concerted effort to revive the industry and support the growing
worldwide 'organic' movement.
No comments :
Post a Comment