Cape Times

Barloworld celebrates 75 years on JSE

New opportunit­ies do exist

- Roy Cokayne

BARLOWORLD, which yesterday became only the ninth company to be listed on the JSE for 75 years or longer, believes that many opportunit­ies still exist to grow the array of the various businesses in the group into new territorie­s and adjacent markets.

Clive Thomson, the chief executive of Barloworld, said yesterday that the group was represente­d in 24 countries globally, but there were many opportunit­ies for further geographic­al growth, particular­ly into east and west Africa and to expand its presence in Russia and Europe.

Thomson said there would also be opportunit­ies to grow Barloworld’s businesses into adjacent markets, where it could leverage its core competenci­es and capabiliti­es.

The group’s operations are largely focused on equipment through its long standing Caterpilla­r distributo­rship, automotive, logistics and handling.

Thomson was speaking exclusivel­y to Business Report after a function to celebrate Barloworld 75th anniversar­y as a listed company on the JSE.

Nicky Newton-King, the chief executive of the JSE, congratula­ted Barloworld on the anniversar­y of its listing in 1941.

One of nine Newton-King said this made Barloworld today one of only nine companies of the more than 400 JSE listed companies to be listed for 75 years or longer.

Thomson said examples of opportunit­ies for Barloworld to grow into adjacent markets included its Caterpilla­r power systems business.

He said they largely distribute­d diesel generator sets, but gas would be one of the big growth markets in the future, following the gas discoverie­s off the coast of Mozambique.

“So we are evolving the business model there to make sure we position ourselves as leaders in gas engines,” he said.

Thomson said that there was also an evolution away from fossil fuel into renewable energy and the company was looking at opportunit­ies in micro grids and distribute­d generation, because “the big thing in power” was going to be moving off-grid.

He said this would also take advantage of partnershi­p between Caterpilla­r and First Solar, the leading photovolta­ic manufactur­er in the world.

Thomson said the group had piloted one of these systems at its facility in Isando in Johannesbu­rg and the payback on the capital cost was now about five years compared to 10 to 12 years five years ago, which made it economical­ly unfeasable.

“We are looking at rolling that out, so it’s a shift or evolution of our business model from diesel generators into gas generators and micro grids incorporat­ing a solar solution,” he said.

Important part Thomson said technology would also play an important part in evolving the business model of the group’s Caterpilla­r business, with telematic devices, sensors and technology that was pre-installed on machines sending reams of data to a central location that allowed machines to be monitored that were 2 500km away.

“You will be able to tell anything from whether the operator is speeding and therefore is a safety risk, whether the machine is being overloaded with earth at the bottom of a mine pit, whether the engine is overheatin­g, the fuel consumptio­n and whether there are any stress fractures on the truck body.

“That can lead to a work order and a technician being dispatched to the customer site with the right part before the customer even knows they have a problem,” he said.

Thomson said Caterpilla­r today also had autonomous drills and autonomous mining trucks, where there would not be an operator in the cab, leading to major safety benefits.

“All of these things can bring about radical efficienci­es and customer productivi­ty, machine availabili­ty and machine uptime.

“We are investing quite heavily in those types of technologi­cal solutions, which will significan­tly evolve our business model over time,” he said.

Thomson said that there was also an evolution away from fossil fuel into renewable energy.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Barloworld chief executive Clive Thompson celebrates the 75th anniversar­y of its listing on the JSE.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Barloworld chief executive Clive Thompson celebrates the 75th anniversar­y of its listing on the JSE.
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