Guinness Ghana To Support Planting For Food & Jobs Programme

Guinness Ghana Limited has pledged its support for government’s “Planting for Food and Jobs” programme, stating that it would boost the use of local raw materials by manufacturing companies, and at the same time help to create jobs for thousands of Ghanaians.

According to Mr. Francis Agbonlahor, Managing Director of Guinness Ghana, the company made a key decision some 5 years ago to use local raw materials for the production of its beverages. Within a 4 year period, the company had increased its use of local raw materials from 12% to the current level of 48%.

It is in this vein that Guinness Ghana is excited by government’s “Planting for Food and Jobs” programme, as it seeks to increase the use of local raw materials for its production to 80% by 2020.

Mr. Agbonlahor made this known on Wednesday, March 15, 2017, when he paid a courtesy call on President Akufo-Addo to congratulate him and the people of Ghana on the successful election of 2016, and also on the 60th Independence anniversary celebration.

With two branches in Achimota and Kumasi, and having invested some $50 million in expanding its productive capacity in the last 4 years, the Guinness MD noted that the company had also invested heavily in training farmers in planting schemes and farming methods so as to increase their yields.

He also noted that the brewery was also exporting its products to neighbouring West African countries such as Cote d’Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso and Togo, and is looking forward to expand exports to other countries in the region.

On the company’s corporate social responsibility, Mr. Agbonlahor told the President that Guinness Ghana had initiated schemes which had provided potable drinking water to some 600,000 Ghanaians, and would soon inaugurate a project at the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, which would provide water to 35,000 people.

The Guinness MD, in concluding, appealed to government to take a second look at reintroducing the “4-tier system”, which would see companies, who use local raw materials in their production activities, benefitting from excise duty concessions.

On his part, President Akufo-Addo was happy about the involvement of Guinness Ghana’s 50 year involvement in the development of the country.

The President told the Guinness MD that “we are here (in government) because for some time, our economy was not performing well. So, the Ghanaian people decided they needed a change in direction, and a change in the leadership of the nation in order to revive our economy and put Ghana to the road of progress and prosperity. That is why I am sitting here.”  

To this end, President Akufo-Addo noted that the only way to put the economy back on track was to create a good business climate which would enable the private sector to flourish.

“If our country is to succeed, it will be a function of how strong, creative and innovative the Ghanaian private sector will be.