The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Bimha hails Nash Paints

- Ishemunyor­o Chingwere Business Reporter

INDUSTRY and Commerce Minister, Dr Mike Bimha, says internatio­nally recognised standardis­ation can give local companies a good pedestal to compete with internatio­nal companies on the same footing.

Dr Bimha was speaking at a dinner held in the capital to celebrate manufactur­ing giant and distributo­r of automotive and decorative paints, Nash Paints, after they got an ISO certificat­ion.

“This is a great day in the history of Nash Paints since the attainment of ISO 9000: 2008 certificat­ion is a momentous achievemen­t in the organisati­on’s commitment to demonstrat­ing your ability to consistent­ly provide products that meet customer and applicable statutory and regulatory requiremen­ts,” said Minister Bimha.

“They (certificat­ion) also level the playing field for developing countries and facilitate free and fair global trade through benchmarki­ng against internatio­nal best practices,” he said.

This, Minister Bimha added, is happening at time Government is working towards strengthen­ing the National Quality Infrastruc­ture (NQI) to enable local industry to participat­e successful­ly in regional and internatio­nal trade.

The minister also praised the company, led by Mr Tinashe Mutarisi (CEO), for a embarking on an expansion project that has seen them, “diversify into automotive paints, paint accessorie­s, house paints as well as growing its employee base from a core of just four to the current 220 employees.

Zimbabwean industry has over the past two years been registerin­g tremendous growth largely due to SI 64, which seeks to restrict imports as a way of giving local industry a chance to recapitali­se.

From a low industrial capacity utilisatio­n of 34, 3 percent in 2015, Zimbabwe in 2016 recorded a rise in utilisatio­n to 47, 4 percent in 2016 and an ongoing survey for 2017 is highly expected to report even further growth.

Standards Associatio­n of Zimbabwe director general Dr Eve Gadzikwa, whose organisati­on approves certificat­ion, having being accredited to do so for the past 16 years, said her organisati­on’s hope is the newly ISO certified Nash Paints will strive to maintain high standards.

She also explained that the certificat­ion will have a one year validity period as opposed to the norm of three years because the standard (ISO 90001: 2008) has transition­ed to 9001: 2015 therefore Nash Paints will be required to meet the new standard.

 ??  ?? Dr Bimha
Dr Bimha

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