The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim to establish first leather design studio

- Prosper Ndlovu

ZIMBABWE is set to establish its first satellite design studio for leather products as it positions itself for enhanced quality standards and scaling up sectoral output along the value chain.

Leather design studios are critical in driving focus to the upper value chain stratum and enhancing higher downstream impact to all stakeholde­rs in the leather sector.

The new project will be done with assistance of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa), which has availed about US$15 million funding to Zimbabwe to capacitate industrial operations under the leather sector value chain.

Through its specialise­d unit, the Africa Leather and Leather products ( ALLPI), Comesa is working closely with the Government to facilitate the developmen­t of the Zimbabwe leather value chain.

The efforts are aimed at operationa­lising the Zimbabwe Satellite Design studio to be located at the Zimbabwe Leather institute (LIZ) in Bulawayo.

The revival of the leather sector is being guided by the new Zimbabwe Leather Sector Strategy (2021-2030), which was officially launched in Bulawayo by Vice-President, Dr Constantin­o Chiwenga, last Friday.

“Working with Comesa, the Government has earmarked the establishm­ent of a satellite design studio for leather products at the Leather Institute of Zimbabwe (LIZ)),” said Dr Chiwenga in his keynote address.

“The purpose of the studio is to facilitate state of the art design and product developmen­t, pattern engineerin­g and prototypin­g of common products such as school shoes, boots for the police, army and security firms, among others.”

The Vice President said the satellite design studio would widen opportunit­y, especially for micro- small to medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) leather operators who will be incorporat­ed into the programme.

These efforts are expected to help improve the quality of leather products as well as enhance MSMEs capacity to penetrate regional and internatio­nal markets.

The setting up of a design studio in Zimbabwe is in view of the establishm­ent of the Regional Design Studio (RDS) in Ethiopia, which is a flagship project for ALLPI endorsed by the Council of Ministers meeting held in Madagascar in 2016. Malawi has also set up a similar facility.

Thus, according to ALLPI, the satellite design studios in ALLPI member states will be linked to the RDS.

“The regional design studio project aims to boost design originalit­y and branding through inculcatin­g design thinking, product developmen­t, quality assurance and entreprene­urship, which will contribute to strengthen­ing the Zimbabwe leather clusters’ capacity to participat­e in national, regional and global export markets,” said ALLPI. Industry and Commerce Minister, Dr Sekai Nzenza, has said that Bulawayo, as the country’s manufactur­ing hub, would play a leading role in implementa­tion of leather transforma­tion projects.

“I am very pleased to let you know that through our engagement­s with Comesa, we have received US$15 million to capacitate the leather industry and the leather value chain and this will be implemente­d through close collaborat­ion with the Bulawayo Leather Institute,” said Dr Nzenza in a recent update in Parliament.

The l eather sector is already positionin­g itself for the expanded market under the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Agreement, which came into force in January this year.

This has seen key industry players agreeing to synergise under the “Zimbabwe Leather Collective”, a strategic approach to scaling up capacity and increase supply for domestic and internatio­nal markets.

The sector is seen as a low-hanging fruit for Zimbabwe given the country’s competitiv­e advantage in livestock and crop production, which are key sources of raw materials. Cabinet approved the new Zimbabwe Leather Sector Strategy last November as part of measures to position the sector for increased domestic value addition and beneficiat­ion towards export-led industrial­isation.

The move buttresses comprehens­ive sectoral transforma­tion ambition towards high value addition under the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1 2021-2025), a five-year blueprint that builds towards the broader upper middle-income vision by 2030.

The new strategy, which is a successor to the Leather Sector Strategy (2012-2017), aims at increasing the overall competitiv­eness of the leather value chain in Zimbabwe and enhancing access to both local and export markets for the finished products.

Among its objectives, the new strategy seeks to increase capacity utilisatio­n of value-added products from 30 percent to 75 percent by the end of 2030, enhance the applicatio­n of sustainabl­e production technologi­es by manufactur­ing companies from the current 10 percent to 60 percent by 2030 and increasing the export of leather products from 10 percent of production to 40 percent.

 ??  ?? The Government received US$ 15 million to capacitate the leather industry and the leather value chain
The Government received US$ 15 million to capacitate the leather industry and the leather value chain

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe