Mfonobong Nsehe of Forbes recently compiled a list of 10 young African millionaires to watch in 2013. Check out the list below of young African millionaires leading the way in the field of business.
Mohammed Dewji, Tanzania
Source: Manufacturing
Dewji, 38, a Tanzanian businessman and politician, is the CEO and leading shareholder ofMohammed Enterprise Limited (METL),
one of the largest industrial conglomerates in East Africa. His
father, Gulam Dewji, founded the conglomerate decades ago as a trading
company but ‘Mo’ as he is popularly called, now calls the shots. He was
solely responsible for engineering the group’s transformation from a
trading house to a manufacturing powerhouse. METL, which records an
annual turnover of close to $2 billion, owns 21st Century Textiles, one
of the largest textile mills in sub-Saharan Africa by volume. The group
also manufactures soap, beverages, edible oils and other food products
as well as bicycles and motorcycles. Other assets include an insurance
firm, a petroleum marketing outfit and a container depot in Tanzania’s
capital city of Dar Es Salaam. The group employs over 24,000 full-time
employees. Mo Dewji is a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and a
Member of Parliament for Tanzania’s Singida Urban constituency. (I met with Dewji in Tanzania recently and will be writing a detailed piece on Dewji’s business holdings).
Igho Sanomi, Nigeria
Source: Oil Trading
In 2004, Igho Sanomi founded the Taleveras Group, a
Nigerian energy trading company. Taleveras trades over 100 million
barrels of crude oil as well as several million tons of gasoline, LPG
and jet fuel. In April 2012, Taleveras acquired production sharing
contracts (PSCs) for three offshore oil blocks in Ivory Coast. In June
2013, Taleveras sold a 65% stake in one of its Ivorian offshore upstream
projects to Lukoil of Russia for an undisclosed price. Taleveras also
owns a stake in a power distribution firm in Nigeria. Sanomi is believed to be a close associate of Nigeria’s Petroleum Minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke. Sanomi is 38 years old.
Quinton van der Burgh, South Africa
Source: Mining
The 36 year-old South African coal magnate is the founder and chairman ofQuinton van der Burgh Investments,
a diversified holding company that is the controlling shareholder in
Eyethu Coal, a company that mines coal in South Africa’s Mpumalanga
region. Eyethu owns two operational mines and is a major supplier of
coal to Eskom, South Africa’s dominant power provider. Van der Burgh’s
portfolio also includes Iyanga Coal- a company that owns a mine with
proven reserves of 18 million tons of coal and Burgh Plant Hire-
a company that leases earth-moving equipment to clients like BHP
Billiton, Xstrata and Anglo-American. Van der Burgh is also a TV
personality. He stars in Clifton Shores, an American/South African reality show filmed in Cape Town.
Gerald Wamalwa, Kenya
Source: Engineering & Construction
In 2003, at age 28, Gerald Wamalwa quit his job as a field civil engineer and went on to start Mellech,
an engineering outfit. Today, Mellech Engineering & Construction is
now one of East Africa’s leading construction and infrastructure
engineering company. The company offers services in the construction of
building projects, roads, and water & sewer projects and related
civil engineering infrastructure projects in Kenya, Southern Sudan and
Uganda and grosses over $11 million a year revenues. Wamalwa also owns
ACP Telecoms, a company that provides turnkey telecommunication network
infrastructure solutions.
Sibongile Sambo, South Africa
Source: Private Aviation
Sibongile Sambo, 39, is the founder of SRS Aviation, a successful South African private aviation company. SRS started off in 2004 by brokering contracts between aviation services and those with air-transport needs. Later in the year, when the South African government invited aviation service companies to bid on a lucrative contract for cargo transport, SRS won the bid. Over time, SRS morphed from its cargo business into an integrated provider of private aviation services. SRS now offers clients from Southern Africa professional and personal flight options to international destinations including VIP Charter, tourist charter and helicopter services. The company also provides maintenance, sales and fleet management services to private jet owners. SRS refused to disclose revenues, but a source in the company says annual revenues are several million dollars.
Khanyi Dhlomo, South Africa
Source: Publishing
The Harvard MBA grad and South African
media mogul began her career as a news presenter at SABC, the television
station owned by the South African government, at age 20 while she was
still a journalism student at the University of Witwatersrand. She went
on to become the editor of True Love, a popular South African women’s magazine at age 22. In 2007, she founded Ndalo Media,
a 50-50 joint venture with Media 24, the publishing arm of Naspers,
Africa’s largest media company. Ndalo Media publishes Destiny and
Destiny Man, two of South Africa’s most popular lifestyle magazines.
Ndalo also publishes Sawubona, the in-flight publication for South
African Airways, which is distributed on all local and international SAA
flights. She also owns Luminance, a startup high-end fashion and
lifestyle store in South Africa.
Patrick Ngowi, Tanzania
Source: Alternative Energy
Ngowi, a 28 year-old Tanzanian, is the founder of Helvetic Solar,
East Africa’s leading renewable energy company. Companies in the group
are involved in the handling, supply, installation and maintenance of
hydro turbines, solar power and thermal systems in East Africa.
According to Ngowi, Helvetic’s revenues are expected to hit $7 million
before the end of this year and the company is extremely profitable.
The company’s major clients include the United Nations, World Vision
and the Tanzanian Army. An emerging philanthropist, he offers basic
lighting facilities to Tanzania’s rural poor through his Light For Life foundation.
Ken Njoroge, Kenya
Source: Mobile technology
Njoroge, 37, is the founder of Cellulant,
a leading Pan-African mobile commerce company that manages, delivers
and bills for content and commerce services over mobile networks.
Cellulant provides mobile banking, mobile payments, music, information
services and other mobile related services. Njoroge founded the company
in 2004 along with a Nigerian partner, Goke Akinboro. It now has a
presence in 8 African countries and boasts a clientele of African
blue-chips like Barclays Bank, Standard Chartered, MTN and other
companies. Cellulant’s revenues for 2012 exceeded $120 million.
Colin Thornton, South Africa
Source: Computer Services
In 1998, when he was 20, South African
computer whiz Colin Thornton dropped out of the University of
Witwatersrand where he was pursuing a BSc in Computer science. He raised
$1,000 (R5, 000) from friends and family to print out flyers and other
marketing material promoting his startup company which would fix
computers. Today, that company is Dial-A-Nerd, a company that provides computer support services dedicated tohomes and businesses.
Dial a Nerd’s team of mobile technicians are able to repair, build,
upgrade or even replace PCs at your premises. The company has annual
revenues of close to $10 million, 14 branches and 150 staff.
Alan Knott-Craig Jr., South Africa
Source: Technology, Investments
The 36 year-old South African entrepreneur is the founder of World Of Avatar (WOA),
the private investment holding company that acquired MXit from Namibian
founder Herman Heunis and Naspers for $50 million in August 2011. Mxit
is a mobile instant messaging services which offers social networking,
mobile voice clips, music & entertainment, banking access and other
community-based applications. It currently has over 20 million users.
Alan also has stakes in popular South African online publication Daily
Maverick; advertising network Shinka, which sells ad space on MXit; and
market research company Pondering Panda. Alan is a 2009 World Economic
Forum Young Global Leader.
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