African supply chains can unlock sustained economic growth post pandemic

12th June 2020

     

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The current Covid19-related economic challenges, locally and throughout Africa, starkly highlight the need for pan-African companies and governments to support African supply chains and,  in so doing, boost economic activity on the continent.

This can be achieved by procuring the production of goods and services for infrastructure and industrial projects through the mechanism of ‘Team Africa’ –  a concept in which local suppliers and manufacturers collaboratively supply the mining, industrial, power generation and other industries.

“Covid-19 provides further impetus for Africa to support its own supply chains which will stimulate business in a myriad of upstream and downstream supply chains,” says South African steel fabricator and erector Betterect MD Nicolette Skjoldhammer.

“While the new intra-African trade agreement provides opportunities and incentives for African stakeholders to procure from local businesses, the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic have shown industry just how dependent Africa has become on the Asian supply of goods and services, and prices of Asian consumables – to name but one supply chain item among many –  are rising exponentially,” she advises.

Skjoldhammer says that one of the ways in which industrial supply chains on the continent can collaboratively drive growth, is if companies, which focus on the supply, processing, fabrication and erection of steel structures, collaborate to deliver pan-African infrastructure projects.

“These companies [would be] able form a cooperative and synergistic ‘Team Africa’, which supplies and processes the steel, or fabricates, and installs the finished steel structures,” she explains.

“South Africa and its [peers] like Nigeria and Ghana certainly have the expertise to successfully undertake the design, fabrication and installation of large steel structures throughout the continent. We have not only proven this over years of successfully participating in new and expansionary mining, power generation and other infrastructure projects; but by supplying the core expertise in large structural steel projects under the auspices of European and Asian companies,” says Skjoldhammer.

She stresses that if one “peels away” the various levels of project supply, frequently they would find that South African and African expertise and capabilities remain at the core.

She adds that one of the main stumbling blocks to this ‘Team Africa’ concept, is the perception that Asian goods and services are more cost-effective than those locally available and the fact that project financing is often provided by Asian companies.

However, Skjoldhammer notes that the truth of the matter is that when potential clients and their estimators look at sourcing costs, they often do not consider the cost of, for example, a fully erected steel fabrication project.

“Our experience has shown us that equipment fabricated in China is on average about 30% more expensive on landing in Africa; and [about] 20% more expensive at this point when it is imported from Turkey,” she comments.

The goal, says Skjoldhammer, is for African companies to be instrumental in growing the local and pan-African market for African companies – thereby establishing a virtuous cycle of stimulated economic growth throughout the continent.

“To achieve this aim, companies and stakeholders must identify their own ‘Team Africa’ to collaboratively participate in projects during the conceptual and design stages.”

Further, in terms of procurement criteria in the context of ‘Team Africa’, parties should consider local content as an incentive rather than a compliance matter, because requirements to include local content often hamper the undertaking of new projects.

“The intra-African trade agreement is evidence that key stakeholders are already thinking and engaging along the lines of procurement in terms of a ‘Team Africa’ concept and mechanism.”

Moreover, she says that the Africa Continental Free Trade Area agreement’s current implementation means that pan-African countries will not pay tariffs when they trade with each other.

Logistical obstacles to working in African countries, such as moving equipment and fabricated structures across borders, dealing with customs ‘red tape’ and delays, and obtaining the necessary permits to work in-country, remain a potential hindrance. However, the intra-African trade agreement is geared to address some of these challenges, such as improving inadequate transport infrastructure, which could also assist in more infrastructural projects being implemented.

Skjoldhammer explains: “Undertaking more projects on the continent will create, and drive, the core growth that, in turn, generates further growth. The use of the African supply chain for projects across Africa will open up an even deeper supply chain on the continent from, for example, a local steel fabricator buying locally rolled steel, to the support industries which specialise in galvanising, corrosion-protecting and painting, and the range of businesses both up and downstream in the supply chain which support the steel fabricator with telecommunications, transport and other items such as personal protective equipment and stationery.”

She concedes that the continent as a whole also still faces challenges such as corruption and – in certain countries – political instability which may hinder efforts to bolster the local supply chain. “However, for ‘Team Africa’ to thrive, only a few African countries need to support the ‘Team Africa’ supply chain. The rest will soon follow,” she asserts.

She notes that her company recently formed a ‘Team Africa’ alliance with a steel supplier and processor, to supply a Zimbabwean gold mining operation with large steel tanks for a processing plant.

“This highly successful collaboration and synergistic project demonstrates that there is no limit to what a ‘Team Africa’ can do. The knowledge and experience in industry is such that we can deliver any project throughout the continent,”  she enthuses.

African companies and countries must take the long-term view of ‘sowing the seeds for the future’ by supporting one another, combining their resources, skills and experience to realise an “amazing and well-timed opportunity” to transform the continent into an economic powerhouse, Skjoldhammer concludes.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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