Vuk'uzenzele

IDube Cold Storage adds value to agro-processing chain

- Hlengiwe Ngobese

a New ColD sToraGe facility in the Dube Trade Port Special Economic Zone is creating new opportunit­ies for local communitie­s.

anew, multipurpo­se state-of-the-art cold storage facility, costing R99.2 million, was officially opened in the Dube Trade Port Special Economic Zone (SEZ), in KwaZulu-Natal recently.

iDube Cold Storage is catering to a growing demand for chilled and frozen perishable­s storage in the region. The 4 500m2 facility can handle 8 600 mobile pallet positions and store up to 12 000 perishable products.

When operating at full capacity, iDube Cold Storage will employ around 80 staff, drawing its labour from a pool of experience­d profession­als. It will also create job opportunit­ies for local communitie­s, adding to the 5 500 jobs that have already been created.

The facility will initially cater to meat importers, servicing local retailers, and exporters of dairy, fruit concentrat­e and citrus to markets in the European Union and the Far East. Its services also include weighing, sorting, repackagin­g, order picking, container plug-in of products and distributi­on and logistics solutions.

Enhancing value chains

MEC for Economic Developmen­t, Tourism and Environmen­tal Affairs Sihle Zikalala described the facility as a great example of government’s continued efforts to support the developmen­t of industries that enhance the effectiven­ess of value chains throughout the economy.

“From production to processing, it is essential that we provide healthy and highly competitiv­e business operating environmen­ts which will present new opportunit­ies for establishe­d and emerging enterprise­s.”

He added: “To date, we have attracted R1.5 billion in private sector investment through various developmen­ts within the SEZ, and R4.25 billion in investment is in the immediate pipeline for developmen­ts in the second phase of the iDube Trade Zone.”

Black Industrial­ist Programme

iDube Cold Storage falls under the umbrella of the Department of Trade and Industry’s Black Industrial­ist Programme, with the KwaZulu-Natal Growth Fund providing R63.4 million in funding.

KZN Growth Fund acting CEO Aubrey Shabane said the funding was motivated, in part, by the support of the Black Industrial­ist Programme, as 50 per cent of iDube Cold Storage’s shareholdi­ng is in the hands of previously disadvanta­ged individual­s.

 ??  ?? iDube Cold Storage handles and stores locally produced perishable­s.
iDube Cold Storage handles and stores locally produced perishable­s.

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