The Herald (South Africa)

Condom factory boost for province

● Factory, gem-cutting works to create 450 jobs in East London IDZ

- Deneesha Pillay pillayd@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

A R79m condom-manufactur­ing company is one of two new investment initiative­s looking to stretch the economic impact for the province of the East London Industrial Developmen­t Zone.

The new investors, Nulatex SA and Meek Mines, were announced at the IDZ on Thursday and are expected to generate at least 450 new jobs for the Eastern Cape.

Nulatex SA CEO Kingsley Tloubatla said the company would begin production of the condoms in the first quarter of 2019 and would be supplying the local market and the government.

“We are one of the contracted companies to supply the department of health with Max condoms – coloured, flavoured and scented condoms,” Tloubatla said.

“We will be manufactur­ing grape, strawberry, natural and banana-flavoured condoms.”

He said being based at the East London IDZ would ensure ease of access to imports of the primary raw material, latex.

“We don’t have latex locally or within the continent.

“Most of it comes from East Asia, so being here is very beneficial for us.

“Being located here also provides the opportunit­y to export with ease to global markets,” he said.

“We are thoroughly excited to be able to provide quality and sustainabl­e jobs which are much needed in this province.”

Meek Mines’ executive director Neil Isaacs said the company would not pay to establish a facility but rather invest equipment for diamond beneficiat­ion (cutting and polishing) within an already developed facility at the East London IDZ.

“What we did as Meek Mines is sign a lease agreement to occupy this space within the East London IDZ.

“The equipment, which includes laser-cutting technology, will give us the capacity to cut and polish 20,000 carats per month,” Isaacs said.

The company has already identified three markets where the diamonds will be exported for jewellery manufactur­ing – the Middle East, the Far East and Brussels.

“But both local and internatio­nal markets will benefit from this – 20% local and 80% internatio­nal.

“With this initiative, 150 jobs will be created,” Isaacs said.

Following the announceme­nt at the IDZ, finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane said the province welcomed the initiative­s and there were more in the pipeline.

“We are aggressive as a province to ensure that we turn around the situation and turn around the economic outlook of the Eastern Cape.

“These two investment­s are going to help us a great deal in addressing the challenges of the outward migration where we are losing a lot in terms of our provincial equitable share.”

Simphiwe Kondlo, CEO of the East London IDZ, said the zone offered a world-class platform in terms of the infrastruc­ture and specialise­d facilities being developed.

It was also part of SA’s special economic zone programme, offering incentives to manufactur­ers.

“With these investment­s, there are strong backward linkages where we can accelerate regional integratio­n.

“We have got a highly specialise­d building for the mineral beneficiat­ion [for] which we actually did benchmarki­ng in China and looked at facilities of this nature,” Kondlo said.

“Nulatex is also moving into a facility that has been developed and is now being fashioned to accommodat­e pharmaceut­ical requiremen­ts.

“As the East London IDZ, we [are] actually leading the way for developmen­t of highly specialise­d facilities.”

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OSCAR MABUYANE

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