Cipla Quality Chemical Industries Limited
Private | |
Industry | Pharmaceutical Industry |
Founded | 2005 |
Headquarters | Luzira, Kampala, Uganda |
Key people
|
Emmanuel Katongole executive chairman Nevin Bradford executive director & chief executive officer |
Services | Pharmaceuticals |
Total assets | US$120 million (2012) |
Number of employees
|
350 (2012) |
Website | Homepage |
Cipla Quality Chemical Industries Limited (CIPLAQCIL), is a pharmaceutical manufacturing company in Uganda. According to a 2007 published report, it was the only company in Africa that manufactured triple-combination antiretroviral (ARV) drugs.[1]
Contents
Location
The pharmaceutical manufacturing plant is in the southeastern neighborhood of Kampala, known as Luzira, in Nakawa Division, approximately 9 kilometres (5.6 mi), by road, southeast of the central business district.[2] The coordinates of the CIPLAQCIL pharmaceutical plant are 0° 18' 18.00"N, 32° 38' 24.00"E (Latitude:0.3050N; 32.6400E).[3]
The factory sits on 12 acres (4.9 ha) of well-mainicured lawns. The first plant was commissioned in 2007, with a capacity of 6 million tablets (pills) per day. A second plant is being planned on the premises, which will raise the manufacturing capacity to 18 million tablets (pills) daily.[4]
Quality Chemicals Limited
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The company, known as Quality Chemicals Limited (QCL), was formed in 1997 by six investors:
- Randall Tierney
- Edward Martin
- Francis Kitaka - former chairman, CIPLAQCIL
- Emmanuel Katongole - executive chairman, CIPLAQCIL
- Frederick Kitaka - chief financial officer, CIPLAQCIL
- George Baguma - chief commercial officer, CIPLAQCIL
QCL focused initially on the importation of generic drugs from India. In 2004, QCL convinced the Indian drug maker, Cipla, to go into a joint venture with QCL and set up a pharmaceutical plant in Uganda. Ground was broken in 2005 and the factory was commissioned in 2007.[5]
New manufacturing plant
In 2007, the company commissioned a new pharmaceutical manufacturing plant in Luzira, a suburb of Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city. The factory initially was a joint venture between QCL, the government of Uganda, and the Indian pharmaceutical company Cipla. In 2009, TLG Capital invested an undisclosed amount of money in the project.[6] Later, Capitalworks Investment Partners, a private equity firm based in South Africa, also became a shareholder in the pharmaceutical plant.
Besides manufacturing the triple-combination ARVs, the new factory also manufactures the new antimalarial drug Lumartem, containing artemisinin and lumefantrin. Lumartem has less drug resistance than some of the commoner antimalarials like Chloroquine. The new plant is estimated to cost about US$38 million.[7] In February 2010, the government of Uganda divested from the new pharmaceutical plant by selling its shares "at cost" to Quality Chemical Industries Limited. The transaction was valued at approximately US$5 million.
In February 2011, the owners of the pharmaceutical factory announced an US$80 million expansion to the production line, to include increased production of antiretroviral and antimalarial medication.[8] In April 2012, British media reported that QCIL was in the process of expanding its manufacturing capacity fourfold. The factory had received a stamp of approval of its processes and products from the World Health Organization. The products will be initially marketed to the Eastern African countries of Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda.[9]
Ownership of pharmaceutical plant
As of March 2015[update], the shareholding in the pharmaceutical plant is as depicted in the table below:[10]
Rank | Name of Owner | Percentage Ownership |
---|---|---|
1 | Meditab Holdings Limited of Uganda | 51.05 |
2 | Quality Chemicals Limited of Uganda | 22.05 |
3 | Capitalworks Investment Partners of South Africa | 14.40 |
4 | TLG Capital of the United Kingdom | 12.50 |
Total | 100.00 |
Governance
The executive chairman of the board of directors of CIPLAQCIL is Emmanuel Katongole, who was formerly the managing director of QCIL. He replaced Francis Kitaka, the first person in East Africa to train as a biochemist,[citation needed] who served as chairman from 2005 until November 2013.[11] The managing director of CIPLAQCIL is Nevin Bradford.[12]
See also
References
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External links
- QCIL To Manufacture Special ARVs
- Museveni Opens AIDS Drugs Factory
- TLG Capital
- Frontier Private Equity Firms Turn Sights On Africa
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