President Museveni has announced that the government will purchase the Mayuge Sugar Factory for Busoga sugarcane farmers.
Museveni made the announcementĀ while meeting sugarcane growers, millers, and sugar manufacturers from across Uganda at Kityerera State Lodge, Mayuge, on August 6.
During the meeting, the farmers gave the government a green light to go into purchase negotiations with the sugar factory. The new ownership model is expected to restore fairness in the sugar industry and ensure that profits return directly to the farmers.
āI pledged to build a sugar factory for you. Recently, the people of Mayuge Sugar Factory came and wanted to sell it to me and give it to the poor people. Do you agree?ā Museveni asked, receiving a resounding āYes!ā from the farmers.
āOkay, we shall negotiate with them and buy it for you,ā the president assured.
The meeting brought together key stakeholders from Ugandaās major sugarcane growing regions ā Busoga, Buganda, Western, and Northern Uganda ā and is part of President Museveniās wider agenda to reform the agro industrial sector and uplift communities from poverty.
In the same meeting, Museveni revealed that the cabinet will decide the fate of CN Sugar Ltd and Shakti Sugar limited which were closed due operational issues. He said the issue should be handled next week on Monday.
Museveni directed the Minister for Trade, Industry and Cooperatives, Francis Mwebesa, to ensure the long-
awaited Sugar Council is established in accordance with the Sugarcane (Amendment) Act, 2023, passed by Parliament in April, 2025.
The council is expected to regulate the industry and represent the interests of growers and millers alike. The council will consist of a chairperson, four representatives of sugarcane out-growers, four from sugar millers, and Permanent
Secretaries from the Ministries of Agriculture, Finance, and Trade.
During the same meeting, Budugo Isa, chairperson of the Uganda National Association of Sugarcane Growers, expressed concern over the continued deduction of a 5% levy from farmers delivering sugarcane to factories, a cost management charge that was supposed to be scrapped under the new law.
āWe had hope in this council, but the Ministry of Trade is taking too long to implement it,ā Budugo lamented.
Mwebesa pledged to enact new regulations in line with the presidentās directive. He also disclosed that the government has secured funds to compensate suppliers of the Atiak Sugar Factory, and the payments would be effected next week.
Museveni shared personal insights on wealth creation, the challenges of land fragmentation, and the transformation of traditional communities.
“The idea of transformation was not clear in the 1960s. Some people believed that poverty must exist ā that some be rich while others stay poor. I refused that logic,” he said.
āWhen I went to school, I compared traditional systems with capitalist economies and saw how industrial revolutions changed societies.”