Bamburi Cement PLC in partnership with International Finance Corporation (IFC) through the Sourcing2Equal (S2E) program, has embarked on a special training initiative targeting women-owned businesses to increase their participation in the procurement opportunities within its supply chain.
Speaking during the first training session attended by over 200 women-owned businesses, Bamburi Cement PLC Country CEO Mohit Kapoor expressed the company’s intentional commitment to its Sustainable Procurement Agenda whose core element is to ensure diversity and gender inclusivity in access to procurement contracts.
“Many Women-owned Small and Medium Enterprises (WSMEs) continue to face challenges while navigating local complex corporate value chains, due to a myriad of challenges like poor credit muscle and lack of information. We are committed to providing a lasting solution that promotes equitable competition for supply contracts and desire to see this outcome both within Bamburi Cement and across the industry at large, which is predominantly male-dominated,” Kapoor said.
The training program will include at least two training sessions this year and will be delivered jointly by Bamburi Cement PLC, IFC and IFC’s training partner, WEConnect International.
The women business leaders will gain insight into Bamburi Cement’s supply system and supplier eligibility criteria as well as understand the procurement rules and procedures.
Bamburi signed the partnership with IFC in May last year, with three commitments: to develop and implement a gender-inclusive sourcing strategy, to collect gender-disaggregated procurement data, and to invest in a targeted supplier outreach program that will raise awareness on procurement opportunities at the company among women-owned businesses.
A Kenyan-based woman-owned business is qualified by 51 per cent ownership by a woman. According to a Sourcing2Equal 2021 survey by IFC, despite 33 per cent of local SMEs being women-owned, only 3 per cent of procurement purchases go to them, with a majority participating as sub-contractors.
On the other hand, most companies do not have quality data to determine how many of their suppliers are women-led enterprises.
“As a market leader, we will continue to scale up our efforts towards diversifying our supplier base so that it is more inclusive of women owned businesses. In this regard, we aspire to ensure that our total procurement spend that goes to special groups which include women-owned businesses, youths, and persons with disabilities, hits 30 per cent by 2025,” Bamburi Cement’s Supply Chain Director Moses Were noted
“And from these trainings, we hope that more women businesses will express interest in our supply chain to help us grow their share by 10 per cent.”
IFC implements the program with funding support from the Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative (WE-FI) and the Government of Norway.
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