Kiira Motors, Uganda’s state-owned automotive company, has begun work on a $263m assembly plant and plans to begin production for the East African market by the middle of 2021.
The plan was put forward in April last year, when the Ugandan cabinet approved the development timetable and $40m in seed funding. Preparation work began in February on the 100-acre factory site, which is Jinja District on the northern shore of Lake Victoria.
The contractor for the project is the National Enterprise Corporation Construction Works and Engineering, part of the commercial arm of the Ugandan defence force.
When complete, the factory should produce some 5,000 vehicles a year, made up of Kiira Motors car prototypes and a solar-powered bus. Later, Kiira Motors hopes to make trucks, pick-ups and sport utility vehicles.
Kiira Motors’ rendering of the Jinja factory
Isaac Paul Musasizi, the chief executive of Kiira Motors, told the Bloomberg news agency that the company was in talks with prospective partners for provision of technology, the sale of an equity stake in the plant or the undertaking of joint ventures.
Ruhakana Rugunda, the prime minister of Uganda, said in April 2019: "We should be in position to encourage the purchase and driving of locally made cars whose prices should be competitive. Government officials and Ugandans should be in position to drive cars produced by Kiira Motors with pride just like it is in Malaysia and other vehicle producing countries."
The market for vehicles in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi may double in the next 13 years to almost 630,000, according to a study by Uganda’s Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation. The ministry owns 96% of Kiira, with Uganda’s Makerere University holding the remainder.
Top image: Kiira’s prototype electric vehicle (Allmuh/CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Right now all I can say is wow! Before going to Europe to but now you can have it at your door step. An introduction of single currency in Africa going to be good for business like this one.
Shortage of manufacturing industries in Africa undermine our economic development.