Mohammed al-Amoudi plans to invest US$600m over two years. |
An Ethiopian company majority-owned by Saudi billionaire
Mohammed al-Amoudi plans to invest US$600m over two years to produce edible
oil, its general manager said.
Horizon Plantations Ethiopia leased a 20,000-hectare
(49,400-acre) plot in the northwestern Benishangul-Gumuz region last month to
grow groundnuts, as part of a government drive to boost commercial agriculture,
Jemal Ahmed said in an interview on April 3 in the capital, Addis Ababa.
Ethiopian-born al-Amoudi, who is ranked by Forbes magazine
as the world’s 63rd-richest person and was worth US$12.3bn in March, owns 80
percent of the company, according to Ahmed.
The Horn of Africa nation imports up to 250,000 tons of palm
oil a year from Malaysia, at a cost of more than US$300m, said Jemal, whose
company Ahfa used to be one of the top five importers of the product. “We want
to substitute that with this project.”
At full capacity, Horizon’s farm, which may be ready for
planting next year, should produce 150,000 tons of oil a year from a processing
plant in Bahir Dar city in Amhara region, according to Jemal.
Ethiopia’s Agriculture Ministry has transferred 100,000
hectares in Benishangul to commercial farmers as part of the agriculture
project, and is offering a further 981,000 hectares, about one-fifth of the
state’s land. Nationwide, the government says it plans to increase a land bank
that sets aside 3.6m hectares of Ethiopia’s total 110.4m hectares for commercial
farming.
The four-year-old programme has forcibly relocated more than
1m Ethiopians in the south and east of the country, according to the
California-based advocacy group Oakland Institute. The government rejects the
allegation.
Horizon’s river-irrigated plot, which it says the government
will increase to 35,000 hectares when 10,000 hectares of the initial area is
cleared, is “barren land,” according to Jemal. “There are no human beings
living in it,” he said.
Last month, the Addis Ababa-based company bought Gojeb
Agricultural Development Enterprise in the southern region from the government
for 35.1m birr (US$2m), Jemal said. It plans to grow bananas and pineapple for
export on 1,500 hectares. Horizon jointly runs the nation’s largest coffee
estate, Bebeka, with the government in southwest Ethiopia, he said.
Al-Amoudi’s companies also won bids for four other state-
owned enterprises, including the nation’s largest orange-grower, Upper Awash
Agro-Industry Enterprise, Privatization Agency spokesman Wondefrash Assefa said
on March 29.
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