Oman Daily Observer

$110m Duqm mega fisheries project set for early-2022 launch

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT, MARCH 17

One of Oman’s largest fish processing ventures — a $110 million project planned in the Fisheries Industrial Zone of the Special Economic Zone (SEZ) at Duqm — will commence production in early 2022, according to a key investor in the initiative.

Internatio­nal Sea Food Co will be designed with a capacity to produce 72,000 tonnes per annum of sardine along with 17,000 tonnes of tuna, said Oman Fisheries Co SAOG, presently the Sultanate’s biggest fish processing enterprise owned 24 per cent by the Omani government represente­d by Oman Food Investment Holding Company — the country’s food sector investment flagship.

Oman Food Investment is spearheadi­ng the establishm­ent of Internatio­nal Sea Food Co and has since attracted investment from a number of local and regional players, including Hassad Food, the premier food investment corporatio­n in Qatar.

Oman Fisheries plans to use its 12.5 per cent stake in the proposed Duqm venture to drive its “vertical growth”, the company’s Chairman

2.5 PER CENT STAKE BY OMAN FISHERIES AIMED AT DRIVING VERTICAL GROWTH

said. The plant will also produce fish oil and fish-based animal feed, as well invest in a captive metal can manufactur­ing facility.

Partly state-owned Oman Fisheries, which was set up by Royal Decree in 1987, is reducing its dependence on local traditiona­l fishermen for the bulk of its feedstock for its processing plants, and is instead investing in its own commercial fishing capability.

At the same time, it has signed strategic deals with six internatio­nal fishing firms that are operating in Omani waters under profit sharing arrangemen­ts.

Further, Oman Fisheries has commercial tie-ups with private firms covering the procuremen­t of their frozen onboard catch when they fish in internatio­nal waters.

Additional­ly, the Muscat-based company plans to invest in the modernisat­ion of its major plants in Muscat, Masirah and Salalah, aimed at bolstering its collective capacity to handle volumes generated by its commercial vessel fleet.

Also, building on its partnershi­ps with small and medium enterprise­s (SMES) in the fisheries sector, the company is set to bring a further three Sme-owned processing plants under its operationa­l auspices — a move that will ramp up its total processing capacity to 90,000 tonnes per annum, which accounts for around one-third of the country’s total catch of fresh fish.

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