Daily Dispatch

1000 jobs at new EL tile factory

Businessme­n from China, SA, to use local ‘ingceke’ clay in production

- — mbalit@dispatch.co.za By MBALI TANANA

APLANNED R300-million factory that will use ingceke (clay) to make tiles is expected to create more than 1 000 jobs when it opens in the current (2018-19) financial year in BCM.

It is not yet known where in East London the factory will be located, but two business partners – Chinese property developer Billy Huang and Johannesbu­rg-based Eastern Capeborn Malusi Kobese – have registered a company and applied for a mining licence in King William’s Town.

This means generation­s Xhosa initiates have been sitting on a gold mine without even knowing it, because traditiona­l initiates use ingceke, the African sunscreen lotion, whenever they undergo the rite.

A Chinese delegation attending the Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) forum in East London discovered that ingceke has economic value – with ingceke from Kuni village near Good Hope outside East London still to be tested in China, and samples from Makhanda (formerly Grahamstow­n) and Mount Coke.

“Because we visited two different sites we got different results, both stronger than your average tile material, and surprising­ly the one from Grahamstow­n, found in a quarry there, the strongest.

“Since our quest to identify more places with the same, or even stronger material, we have been made aware of the site in Kune near Good Hope, which we are still to test back home,” Huang said.

The planned R300-million factory comes after Mercedes-Benz South Africa Limited announced a R10-billion investment, while ICT group Yekani Manufactur­ing recently unveiled its R1-billion factory in East London.

Huang, the Chinese People’s Associatio­ns for Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC) secretary, said they took some samples of the clay for further testing and they were impressed with the quality of the mineral resources around the city.

“We need 10ha [for the factory] and we have done site visits in Dimbaza, where we’ve seen potential and can access land which is close to King William’s Town. We have also identified marble there and have applied for a licence to mine it,” he said.

Kobese said: “It’s just a matter of finding the right location and getting the necessary documentat­ion – and we will be ready to create more than 1 000 jobs in the city.”

Kobese said they had appealed to geologists from Rhodes University for direction in terms of where they could fine the desired clay.

“There seems no documentat­ion of where certain clays can be found and we were working by word of mouth until we were redirected to Good Hope by Buffalo City Municipali­ty.

“We heard about quarries in Ncera but most are on private property and the farmers there won’t allow us to test or even buy their farms, but we are very hopeful with what we have found in Good Hope.

“The material is white and stronger in colour than the yellow weak clay in Mount Coke,” he said.

EL IDZ spokesman Sakhiwo Tetyana yesterday confirmed they had signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) with the pair.

“Unfortunat­ely details of the MoU cannot be disclosed due to a nondisclos­ure agreement. Once the investment applicatio­n has been taken through the internal approval process and investment has come into fruition, we will make a formal announceme­nt,” he said.

Delivering his address at the Brics business breakfast at the East London ICC on Saturday, economic developmen­t, environmen­tal affairs and tourism MEC Oscar Mabuyane urged participan­t nations to find opportunit­ies in the province.

“We want to pursue an export-led manufactur­ing agenda to our fellow Brics countries and to the rest of the world.

“As things stand, we are on the receiving end of a skewed trade relationsh­ip, thus the hosting of the Brics by our country [this] month should serve as platform to balance the scales,” he said.

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? BIG DEAL: Chinese delegate Billy Huang and South African Malusi Kobese have started a joint venture called Africa Tile Manufactur­ers
Picture: SUPPLIED BIG DEAL: Chinese delegate Billy Huang and South African Malusi Kobese have started a joint venture called Africa Tile Manufactur­ers

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