https://newsletter.en.creamermedia.com
Africa|Business|Coal|Freight|Infrastructure|Iron Ore|Logistics|Ports|Power|rail|Screening|Services|Transnet|transport|Water|Infrastructure
Africa|Business|Coal|Freight|Infrastructure|Iron Ore|Logistics|Ports|Power|rail|Screening|Services|Transnet|transport|Water|Infrastructure
africa|business|coal|freight|infrastructure|iron-ore|logistics|ports|power|rail|screening|services|transnet|transport|water|infrastructure

South Africa taps business to create office to end rail monopoly

Rail tracks

Photo by Creamer Media

8th April 2024

By: Bloomberg

  

Font size: - +

South Africa has asked companies to help it set up an office to facilitate the entry of private operators onto the continent’s biggest rail network for the first time.

In a letter sent last month to Business Unity South Africa (Busa), the Department of Transport asked the country’s biggest corporate lobby group to help set up a private-sector participation office. It also asked Busa to “support concessioning and investment in freight and passenger networks.”

The department asked whether companies would “be in a position to help them set up a unit,” said Khulekani Mathe, chief executive officer-designate at Busa. “We will produce the capacity to populate it and then have nothing to do it.”

The transport department didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The overture to the private sector over reviving the moribund rail industry is the latest attempt by the South African government to rope in corporate skills in a bid to kick-start collapsing government services ranging from electricity provision to water supply.

South Africa’s freight-rail services, run as a monopoly by state-owned Transnet, have deteriorated to the point where iron ore is piling up in stockpiles at mines and coal railings to ports are at a 30-year low. That’s slashed earnings for companies including units of Anglo American and Glencore. It’s also resulted in a lower tax take for the cash-strapped government.

The government has produced a strategy — the Freight Logistics Roadmap — to reform rail and port services and Transnet last month published a document detailing how it envisages private companies operating its network.

That document, which is open for public comment, has attracted criticism from miners and other companies reliant on rail as it aims to allow private operators to book slots for a period of one year, which then need renewing, rather than having access for longer periods. Longer access would encourage infrastructure investment.

Late last month, Busa wrote to its members asking them to submit proposals to it on how the rail network — or segments of it — could be run, in addition to seeking help to start the PSP office. The deadline for the proposals is April 19.

A number of unsolicited bids “have been submitted to Transnet,” the Department of Transport said in its earlier letter. “These PSP initiatives need screening and prioritizing but can be made market-ready within a year through the establishment of a sector-specific PSP unit.”

Bankable Opportunities

The transport department said the unit will need transaction advisers as well as legal and technical experts to set up “bankable PSP opportunities.”

Mathe said government envisages the unit running along the same lines as an office that’s run bids for private power provision, and secured well over R200-billion in investment.

Edited by Bloomberg

Comments

Showroom

John Deere (Pty) Ltd
John Deere (Pty) Ltd

In 1958 John Deere Construction made its first introduction to the industry with their model 64 bulldozer.

VISIT SHOWROOM 
VEGA Controls SA (Pty) Ltd
VEGA Controls SA (Pty) Ltd

For over 60 years, VEGA has provided industry-leading products for the measurement of level, density, weight and pressure. As the inventor of the...

VISIT SHOWROOM 

Latest Multimedia

sponsored by

Photo of Martin Creamer
On-The-Air (08/11/2024)
8th November 2024 By: Martin Creamer

Option 1 (equivalent of R125 a month):

Receive a weekly copy of Creamer Media's Engineering News & Mining Weekly magazine
(print copy for those in South Africa and e-magazine for those outside of South Africa)
Receive daily email newsletters
Access to full search results
Access archive of magazine back copies
Access to Projects in Progress
Access to ONE Research Report of your choice in PDF format

Option 2 (equivalent of R375 a month):

All benefits from Option 1
PLUS
Access to Creamer Media's Research Channel Africa for ALL Research Reports, in PDF format, on various industrial and mining sectors including Electricity; Water; Energy Transition; Hydrogen; Roads, Rail and Ports; Coal; Gold; Platinum; Battery Metals; etc.

Already a subscriber?

Forgotten your password?

MAGAZINE & ONLINE

SUBSCRIBE

RESEARCH CHANNEL AFRICA

SUBSCRIBE

CORPORATE PACKAGES

CLICK FOR A QUOTATION







sq:0.113 0.213s - 214pq - 2rq
Subscribe Now