CDC backs Miro Forestry with $15m investment
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The UK’s development finance institution CDC has invested $15m in Miro Forestry, a sustainable timber business which operates in Sierra Leone and Ghana.
The UK’s development finance institution CDC has invested $15m in Miro Forestry, a sustainable timber business which operates in Sierra Leone and Ghana.
Miro Forestry, which began planting in late 2010, will use CDC’s investment to expand its operations beyond the current 1,700 hectares (equivalent to 2,300,000 trees) of eucalyptus and teak trees to a total of 8,700 hectares (approx. 11,300,000 trees) by 2017.
Miro will sell the majority of the wood from its plantation forests into local and regional markets.
Miro, which only plants trees on degraded and unused land, is working toward international FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) accreditation which will verify that its forests are responsibly managed.
The company currently employs 350 people, but expects this to increase to in excess of 500 in the coming two years.
Most of these jobs are in impoverished rural areas where there is little or no alternative employment.
Mark Pay, CDC’s Managing Director, Equity Investments, said: “Miro is an excellent example of a company that will be a financial and development success. CDC’s capital will help the company expand its operations, bringing jobs to impoverished rural areas and providing a sustainable alternative to the illegal felling of trees that has decimated Ghana and Sierra Leone’s natural forests.”
CDC is particularly supportive of Miro’s works with local communities.
In Ghana, for example, it is involved in building a local vocational school in which skills such as masonry and carpentry are taught along with grounding in business.
Pay added that Miro is a well-run company that takes seriously its responsibility to local communities and to its employees, and it will be benefit from CDC’s long-term, patient capital.
“Sierra Leone’s already fragile economy has suffered considerable damage as a result of the Ebola crisis but CDC remains confident that companies like Miro can play a part in the economic recovery that we all want to see,” he said.
This is CDC’s first direct investment in a company operating in Sierra Leone and an indication of its confidence in the country’s businesses and their ability to recover from the economic effects of the Ebola crisis.
CDC will invest alongside Finnfund, the Finnish development finance institution, which has a historical expertise in forestry investments.
Andrew Collins, CEO of Miro, said: “We are delighted to have both CDC and Finnfund supporting the long-term development of the company. Both are experienced in the region in which we operate and together they provide us with significant support to ensure we attain highest financial, operational, social, environmental and ethical standards across the group.”
“Sustainable plantation forestry is naturally a business that can provide competitive financial return, whilst significantly improving the long-term economic, social and environmental position of the rural areas in which we operate. Our focus remains to continue our stepwise growth, operating with thrift to ensure we remain economically competitive, with a high quality team and work standards, building long-term sustainable business of which all stakeholders can be proud,” he said.
Growing demand for timber in West Africa, as well as globally, has meant that the region currently experiences rising timber imports and prices.
Despite being an area ideal for plantation forestry, poor supervision of forested regions and a lack of sustainably grown forests have led to significant illegal felling in both Sierra Leone and Ghana.
Kaifala Marah, Sierra Leone’s Minister of Finance and Economic Development welcomed the news of CDC’s investment in our forestry sector: “It comes at a time when the industry is faced with daunting challenges exacerbated by the Ebola crisis. We will work with Miro Forestry to harness mutual benefits from this venture in ways that will improve and expand our forests, boost job creation and contribute to our post-Ebola recovery efforts.”