Business
Nigerian Breweries To Suspend Operations In Two Plants
Nigerian Breweries Plc says it is planning for a company-wide reorganisation which include the temporary suspension of operations in two of its nine breweries.
It said this is part of a company-wide reorganisation as part of a strategic recovery plan aimed at securing a resilient and sustainable future for its stakeholders.
The Business Recovery Plan includes a rights issue and a company-wide reorganisation exercise which includes temporary suspension of two of its nine breweries and an optimisation of production capacity in the other seven breweries, some of which have received significant capital investment in recent years.
These measures include relocating and redistributing employees to the remaining seven breweries and offering support and severance packages to those that become unavoidably affected.
The company said this move is essential to improve its operational efficiency, financial stability and enhance a return of the business to profitability, in the face of the persistently challenging business environment.
In letters signed by the company’s Human Resource Director, Grace Omo-Lamai, and addressed to the leadership of the National Union of Food, Beverage & Tobacco Employees (NUFBTE) and the Food Beverage and Tobacco Senior Staff Association (FOBTOB), the company informed both unions that its proposed plan would include operational efficiency measures and a company-wide reorganisation that includes the temporary suspension of operations in two of its nine breweries.
As a result, and in accordance with labour requirements, the company invited the unions to discussions on the implications of the proposed measures.
Recall that the company recently notified the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX) of its plan to raise capital of up to N600 billion by way of a rights issue, as a means of restoring the company’s balance sheet to a healthy position following the net finance expenses of N189 billion recorded in 2023 driven mainly by a foreign exchange loss of N153 billion resulting from the devaluation of the naira.
Speaking on these developments, the Managing Director/CEO, Nigerian Breweries, Hans Essaadi, described the business recovery plan as strategic and vital for business continuity.
Business
WEF: We Have Over a Billion Barrels of Oil Reserves … Tinubu
Business
NNPC Plans Mini NLNG Projects For Outside Pipeline Network Customers
Business
NEITI Seeks Speedy Completion Of Refineries’ Rehabilitation
-
Business2 days ago
FG Seeks partnership With World Economic Forum On Gas Pipeline Project
-
Rivers2 days ago
Kirike Chiefs Endorse Ogube’s leadership … As Chairman Sues For Unity
-
Featured2 days ago
FG Begins Recruitment Into Federal Civil Service
-
Business2 days ago
Marketers Eye Imported Fuel … As Landing Cost God Below Dangote’s
-
Niger Delta2 days ago
Jonathan, Ogbuku, Diri Preach Unity, Peace … As Bayelsa Clan Installs Monarch
-
Niger Delta2 days ago
Bayelsa Seeks Residents’ Cooperation In New Transportation Policy
-
News2 days ago
FRSC Records 9,570 Road Crashes, Arrests 21,580 Offenders In 2024
-
Niger Delta2 days ago
Ag. Paramount Ruler Restates Stance On Recognition … As Factional Tussle Intensifies In Bayelsa Community