Jaswant Rai To Invest 43.3 Million In Recently Acquired Nzoia Sugar

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jaswant rai to invest 433 million in recently acquired nzoia sugar

Jaswant Rai will inject 43.3 million to modernize Nzoia Sugar and roll out a large-scale cane development plan under a 30-year government lease.

The government leased four sugar mills to private firms after spending over Ksh117 billion in bailouts, aiming to restore profitability through private capital.

West Kenya Sugar pledges transparency, legal compliance, and community engagement while enhancing worker welfare and stabilizing raw material supply to boost output.

Kenyan businessman and sugar tycoon Jaswant Rai is set to invest 43.3 million to revive and expand the struggling state-owned Nzoia Sugar Company, after winning a 30-year lease from the government. The deal marks a significant move in the governments push to turn around the countrys ailing sugar industry by bringing in private investors through competitive leasing.

Rais West Kenya to revive Nzoia

According to a statement issued by the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock on May 10, the Rai-led West Kenya Sugar plans to rehabilitate and modernize the Nzoia factory with the investment of Ksh5.6 billion 43.3 million while undertaking an extensive cane development program in the region. Kenya has leased four state-owned sugar mills to private operators for 30 years in a bid to revive the struggling industry.

The move, confirmed by Agriculture Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe, follows years of bailouts totaling over Ksh117 billion 905 million. Nzoia Sugar was handed to West Kenya Sugar, with other allocations including Chemelil to Kibos, Sony to Busia Sugar, and Muhoroni to West Valley. West Kenya Chairman Jaswant Rai pledged transparency, compliance, and community partnership, promising improved worker welfare and legal adherence.

Board Chairman Alfred Khangati voiced hope that private management would end years of inefficiency and debt. The new lease model is expected to stabilize raw material supply, boost factory output, and enhance farmer morale through timely payments. The government has already disbursed over Ksh2.3 billion 17.78 million to farmers and factory workers ahead of the transition, saying public-private partnerships will inject much-needed capital and restore the sectors productivity and profitability.

Rai expands sugar empire, eyes avocados

Jaswant Rai is one of Kenyas wealthiest businessmen, controlling Rai Group, a leading player in the sugar industry through subsidiaries like West Kenya Sugar and Sukari Industries. The group also owns Kinyara Sugar Works, Ugandas second-largest miller.