Uganda plans to invest as much as 3 trillion shillings ($813 million) during the next decade through a state-owned investment company to unlock industrial investment in areas that currently attract the least private-sector interest.
Uganda Development Corp. is already in agricultural manufacturing and wants to venture into services and mineral processing, Chief Executive Officer Patrick Birungi said Tuesday in an interview in the capital, Kampala. In addition to a hotel, a fruit processor and a stake in a planned sugar miller, the company will build more plants for cereals, cocoa and cassava.
“We want to invest where the private sector is not going strongly,” he said. “We want to go in and de-risk these sectors; we shall start companies in these sectors and then divest them to the private sector.”
The state may raise at least a third of the planned cost and the agency will mobilize the rest from the private sector, multilateral lenders and its own funds, he said. The government has committed to increasing the company’s capitalization to 500 billion shillings in five years, from 70 billion shillings, to boost investment, he said.
UDC will be done with feasibility studies and exploration for clinker in the northeastern Karamoja region by the end of 2019 and plans to start raising funds for the project thereafter, Birungi said. The nation imports as much as 70% of its requirements of the cement-making ingredient from Kenya, India and China, he said.
Uganda plans to invest some $813 million over the next decade to boost its industries.