
He said Silo products were now available at all GMB depots
and other satellite shops which were opened to ensure a wider reach of the
company’s products.
In an interview on the sidelines of a Smart Agriculture
conference at Chaminuka Vocational Training College in Mt Darwin last week, Mr
Mutenha said the products were being sold at reasonable prices in an effort to
stabilise prices on the market.
“From April 1, 2019, Silo Foods became a stand-alone
institution wholly owned by the GMB and are already operational. Silo products
are already available at our 84 depots countrywide. We have gone beyond that to
open satellite shops where Silo products are already being sold,” he said.
“Products such as mealie-meal, wheat flour, stockfeeds,
salt and samp are already on the shelf and are being sold to the general
public. Our prices are reasonable, remember Silo Foods was established to
stabilise foodstuffs prices on the market, so we are a force to reckon with on
the food market.”
A survey conducted by The Herald showed that the firm was
selling a kilogramme of rice at $3,30 for its brand and $3,70 for Pagoda rice,
while 2kg was selling at between $6,10 and $7 depending on the brand. This
compares with prices of between $7 and $9,50 prevailing on the market.
A 5kg packet of Silo rice is selling at $15, compared to
between $23 and $30 charged for similar products on the market.
A 5kg and 10kg of Silo upfu was going for $5,70 and $10,75
respectively while other brands on the market were going for above $7 and $11,
respectively.
A 500g packet of Silo sugar beans is selling for $2,60
while the prices of similar products on the market are ranging between $3,64
and $3,79.
Apart from mealie-meal, rice and sugar beans, the company’s
product range also comprises salt, samp, bran, peanut butter, kapenta, Pearl
Millet grain, flour, mixed fruit jam, coffee, maputi, and popcorn.
Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Minister
Monica Mutsvangwa who announced the roll out of Silo Foods after a Cabinet
sitting at the end of March this year said the demerger of the company from GMB
was a sign that the Public Enterprise Reform Programme by Government is already
paying off, with Silo Food Industries was paying off.
“With respect to the Public Enterprise Reform Programme,
the Minister of Finance and Economic Development (Professor Mthuli Ncube)
updated Cabinet on progress made following the de-merger of the Grain Marketing
Board (GMB) into the Strategic Grain Reserve division and a commercial arm,
Silo Food Industries.
“The minister highlighted that the following steps of
progress had been made towards operationalisation of Silo Food Industries: that
Silo Food Industries is set to begin operations in its new status from 1 April,
2019, that various institutions have already expressed interest to partner Silo
Food Industries and that Silo Food Industries requires US$54,7 million and RTGS
$40 million to finance its operations over a five-year period.”
“Taking into cognisance the critical role Silo Food
Industries is set to play in the economy, Cabinet approved that the process of
appointing the Silo Food Industries Board be expedited to give necessary
strategic guidance and oversight to the entity; that funding proposals from
potential strategic partners for Silo Food Industries be submitted for
consideration and approval by Government and that Government’s minimum equity
holding in Silo Food Industries be 26 percent.”
Government has since injected $70 million into to the
business for it to ramp up production.
An additional US$95 million will be invested over a
three-year period to make the project both viable and sustainable. Herald
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