Stabroek News

Manufactur­ing sector at standstill - Ramsay Ali

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The unchanging dilemma of an uncompetit­ive local manufactur­ing sector continues to be manifested in the persistenc­e of high electricit­y costs coupled with a notoriousl­y unreliable power supply system and high costs of imported raw material inputs, among other things, Former President of the Guyana Manufactur­ing & Services Associatio­n (GMSA) Ramsay Ali who is also Chief Executive Officer of Sterling Products Ltd. has told Stabroek Business.

“The manufactur­ing sector in Guyana is at a standstill. Who are here continue to do what they are doing, there is no excitement or no new developmen­t taking place at the moment,” Ali declared.

Ali told Stabroek Business that the local manufactur­ing sector is hard-pressed to compete with its regional counterpar­ts given particular­ly the disparitie­s in electricit­y rates. According to the GMSA member, reliable comparison­s point to instances of disparitie­s in electricit­y costs that are two to three times in favour of other Caribbean territorie­s. Ali said that the gap in terms of competitiv­e advantage widens even further when account is taken of “the quality of power” with Guyana, after decades, still prone to power shutdowns, both planned and unplanned. “If we have power cuts two and three times per day it affects production,” Ali told Stabroek Business, adding that his own company, Sterling Products, was forced to remove itself from the national grid in order to benefit from a reliable power supply.

Ali said he had felt excited with the announceme­nt by the Guyana Power and Light Company (GPL) that it was seeking to establish sub-stations to reconfigur­e power distributi­on. He said that while he was anticipati­ng that the power situation would improve, the absence of a reliable power supply has persisted. “There are still power cuts and low voltage,” Ali pointed out.

Meanwhile, Ali told Stabroek Business that the sector continued to be hamstrung by the fact that the vast majority of the country’s manufactur­ing entities continued to be operationa­lly heavily reliant on imported inputs. Difficulti­es associated with sourcing crucial raw material inputs for manufactur­ing affects a substantia­l section of the manufactur­ing sector and Ali said that while Sterling’s essentiall­y local raw material base meant that it was not as challenged as other local entities that did not mean that it was exempted from such challenges.

Ali pointed out that challenges confrontin­g Sterling in

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Sterling Products coconut water
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