Kasapreko: Herbal Bitters on Tour
The fastest PET bottling line for liquor that Krones has ever installed is up and running – in the West African nation of Ghana. The privately owned enterprise Kasapreko commissioned it in December 2012.
List of all articles filed under “ghana-stories” category.
The fastest PET bottling line for liquor that Krones has ever installed is up and running – in the West African nation of Ghana. The privately owned enterprise Kasapreko commissioned it in December 2012.
Kasapreko is launching another export campaign. The company had already begun exporting to South Africa and Tanzania in 2012. In 2013 Kasapreko aims to be selling its products in East Africa as well, with Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ruanda and Burundi, a market with 210 million people.
Kasapreko is a beverage company which was founded in 1989, in response to the growing demand for good-quality alcoholic drinks. Today, Kasapreko has become a symbol of innovation in Ghana’s beverage industry and is currently the flagship of the liquor industry.
Some years ago, Ghana chose the path of democracy and that has paid off as showed in its current economic growth rates. The country is continuing to nurture its democracy, grow political tolerance and shape its internal political wrangling while taking advantage of its stable political atmosphere.
Since the Consultative Assembly drafted Ghana’s current constitution in 1992, politics have evolved a lot. Among other things, the constitution defined the terms and rules for elections and re-elections in the country.
Ghana was colonised by the British around the 1870s and was under colonialism for centuries. The country gained political independence in March 1957, thanks to years of political negotiations, making it the first country in sub-Sahara Africa to be freed from colonialism.
Ghana is a country whose people are almost similar to those living in neighbouring countries. Still, Ghana is noted for a burgeoning democracy, peaceful changes in governments between political parties and a respected constitution.
Investors’ appetite in Ghana is rising following the recent oil discovery. As some of those investors setup businesses to profit from the country’s burgeoning economic growth, demand for housing and office spaces is also growing.
With the changes in population growth, the discovery and exploitation of oil in commercial quantities, huge economic growth, the prospects and their attendant effects on FDIs and tourists arrivals in Ghana, the real estate sector is now a new area to invest in.
Ghana is an attractive destination. The country is growing at an eight percent rate and its business environment is trending in the right direction. The financial sector and the banks in particular are well positioned to support Ghana’s economic growth.