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Home Africa

Rail development key to growth in intra-Africa trade

FurtherAfrica by FurtherAfrica
June 15, 2017
in Africa, Agriculture, Angola, Botswana, Coal, Commodities, Development, DRC, Economy, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Export, FDI, Finance, Heavy Sands, Import, Industry and Commerce, Infrastructure, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mining, Mozambique, Namibia, Natural Resources, Nigeria, North-South Corridor, Rail, Road, SADC, South Africa, Tanzania, Trade, Transport, Travel, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe
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Exports from Mozambique to increase with inauguration of the Nacala coal terminal
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A lack of efficient rail infrastructure and a rail “disconnect” were inhibiting dealings within the continent and contributing to struggling intra-African trade growth, Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa-Alliance for Commodity Trade in East and Southern Africatrade and market director George Magai said on Wednesday.

Speaking at the Africa Rail conference, held in Sandton from June 13 to 14, he told delegates during a keynote address that African countries’ own trade with each other was well below that of other developing regions and was costing more.

Intra-African trade costs are 50% higher than trade among countries in East Asia and other developing regions, resulting in Africa integrating with the rest of the world at a faster pace than its own regional integration.

“This high cost of trade is associated with the high cost of moving goods – transportation and logistics account for 30% to 100% of costs,” he explained.

“There is a need to chart a new path – change is needed,” Magai added, pointing to the disjointed and disconnected rail landscape.

To the continent’s detriment, road transport in Africa, despite being more expensive, is faster than rail in Africa, leaving companies and citizens more prone to using roadtransport, said Namibia Works and Transport Deputy Minister James Sankwasa.

While reliable cross-border trade is a critical precondition for unlocking private sector investment in intra-Africa trade, “hostile” development challenges currently faced included limited public resources, high costs and low private sector investment.

“The continent faces a vicious cycle of private-sector underinvestment in infrastructure and procurement that leads to pressure on the public sector to continue intervening in the market,” Magai said.

Both speakers reiterated the benefits of rail, including the removal of road congestion, a reduction in road accidents, a reduction in the cost of transport and an integrated connection between the various Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries, which will promote more trade.

“If we say we are member States, then the right hand must know whet the left hand is doing. That is the type of connection we need in SADC to promote trade,” Sankwasa said.

“By not developing rail, we are not helping ourselves at all,” he said.

Rail, synergised with all forms of transportation, could play a strategic role, as it was a more efficient, effective, safer and cheaper mode of transport, had the capacity to carry both heavy cargo and mass volumes of passengers and was a more environment-friendly mode than road transport, added Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Transport Nigeria Sabiu Zakari, indicating that the lack of rail options could implode major cities.

Increasing pressure is placed on overloaded cities, where exponential population growth, owing to migration and high fertility rates, over the past decade, is placing significant strain on infrastructure.

“In Africa and other developing nations, where there is little or no rural development, cities become the target for the population,” he said, citing the dramatic growth in numbers across major cities of the continent.

In Johannesburg, the population grew from 9.3-million in 2001 to 13.4-million in 2016, while during the same period, Lagos, in Nigeria, experienced an influx of new inhabitants reaching 21-million from 11.2-million 15 years earlier.

Similar trends had been seen in Cairo, in Egypt, Luanda, in Angola, and Casablanca, in Morocco, besides others.

Government’s failure to plan for this presented serious economic and social tension risks, adding further pressure to housing and traffic congestion, along with basic services and infrastructure, Zakari said.

“It is a critical time,” he concluded, noting that adapting to the increasing numbers had become one of the greatest challenges faced by the continent, particularly with the population explosion increasingly meaning transportationwas an essential service.

Source: Engineering News

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Tags: Commodity TradeGeorge Magaiintra-African tradelogisticsRailroadsadcTransport
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