The Zimbabwe Independent

Local firms vie for CSC

- Tinashe Kairiza

A CONSORTIUM of local companies and industrial­ists are seeking to seize a 75% stake in the defunct Cold Storage Company (CSC) after tabling a US$225 million investment proposal to the government.

However, there are fears that the new proposal may trigger a legal battle as the government already has a deal with British firm, Boustead (Pvt) Limited. The subsisting agreement is valued at US$130 million.

Documents show that the consortium, trading as CSC 2016, is represente­d by a team led by former CSC chief executive and Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) member Eddie Cross, Presidenti­al Advisory Committee (PAC) member and United Refineries executive Busisa Moyo and Southern Africa Regional Roundtable for Sustainabl­e Beef vice-president Max Makuvise.

Blue Agri chief financial officer Tawanda Namusi and farming consultant Jean Cawood Simon complete the CSC 2016 team.

Cross said the consortium had crafted the proposal to take over CSC before Boustead came on board highlighti­ng that the initiative would sail through.

“The situation is that we developed that proposal sometime before Boustead Beef came on the scene. In our view Boustead Beef was an unsolicite­d bid. It was submitted to the government and approved by the then Minister of Agricultur­e (the late Perrance

Shiri),” he said.

Boustead regional beef consultant Reginald Shoko declined to comment saying “the company preferred to let due processes take course”.

However, Cross said the proposal stimulated interest from merchant banks in London and the United Kingdom finance institutio­n, CDC.

According to the document submitted to the government in May 2020, the consortium, roped in a British-based financial consultanc­y firm, Meyer & Co represente­d by Peter Meyer, John Mosby and John Trew.

The trio’s “combined knowledge and experience, totalling more (than) 120 years, provides an invaluable source of expertise.”

Under the proposal, the consortium intends to invest US$125 million into the insolvent state enterprise from 2021 to 2030, snapping up the 75% stake cur-. rently held by the government.

If the proposal is approved by the government, the consortium projects it would take over all the assets and liabilitie­s, including foreign liabilitie­s, of CSC Limited, which is 100% owned by the state.

Beef output spins US$168 million annually but is forecast to soar to US$1,17 billion in export earnings over the next decade.

The proposal reads: “We propose that the Government of Zimbabwe’s equity in CSC (2016) Limited be set at 25%, represente­d by two directors. Our CSC (2016) consortium which includes local and internatio­nal companies providing loan and equity funding, will take up the 75% balance of equity funding, represente­d by 10 directors.

“CSC (2016) will take over all the assets and liabilitie­s, including foreign liabilitie­s of CSC Limited, which is 100% owned by the state.

“(The) assets include the CSC headquarte­rs building in Bulawayo, all CSC abattoirs and distributi­on facilities, all state-owned ranches, which will form our cattle buying operations to hold cattle for sale or slaughter and the 100% shareholdi­ngs in Super Canners and Wet Blue Industries and any related movable assets.”

Sources close to the proposed transactio­n, said, “The Agricultur­e ministry legal team has been assigned to find ways of terminatin­g the Boustead deal.”

“The Agricultur­e minister (Anxious Masuka) has tasked the legal officer to look into the joint venture agreement with Boustead to find loopholes to cancel the deal,” said a source who cannot be named for profession­al reasons.

There has not been much action since Boustead entered the joint venture with the government.

According to the proposal, CSC (2016) undertakes to rehabilita­te the embattled entity’s abattoirs, in phases.

In part the proposal reads, “CSC 2016 proposes to undertake a phased rehabilita­tion of CSC abattoirs, commencing with the domestic abattoirs at Bulawayo and Masvingo. Our plan is to bring them into full production within 12 months, at 1 000 head a day.”

A government source said there was concern that the cancellati­on of the Boustead deal could lead to legal action.

“What complicate­s matters is that there is already an ongoing agreement with Boustead and we cannot cancel that deal arbitraril­y as this would attract a lawsuit for breach of contract. So as we speak, there are negotiatio­ns from both sides to find the best way of solving the impending legal imbroglio,” he said.

Efforts to get a comment from Masuka were futile as he had not responded to questions by the time of going to print.

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