Kenya Ports Authority has stated the search for a private entity
to operate the second container terminal whose construction is set to
be completed by March 2016.
The move is meant to
increase efficiency at the facility. However, it may trigger opposition
by some stakeholders such as the Dock workers union which has in the
past been opposed to privatisation of the port.
In an
international tender notice, KPA expressed the intention of contracting a
private investor to operate two berths at the second terminal under a
concession agreement with the winning bidder.
“KPA as
the executing agency of the project intends to retain a private operator
to operate phase 1 of the second container terminal under concession
agreement between the operator and KPA through competitive bidding,” the
ad reads.
The terminal currently in use comprises four berths that are operated by KPA.
It is the first time the ports manager is seeking private sector services to manage operations at a section of the facility.
The
second container terminal will comprise four berths. Phase 1 of the
project, which is set to be handed over to the private operator,
constitutes two berths.
Construction of the terminal is
financed through a ¥26 billion (Sh19.6 billion) loan between the
government and the Japan International Cooperation Agency whose
agreement was signed in 2007.
In May, Toyota Tsusho
Corporation and Mitsui Engineering & Shipbuilding Co were awarded a
Sh2.5 billion contract to supply and install cranes at the new terminal
in a tender that was open only to Japanese companies, according to terms
of the funding.
KPA projects that the cargo throughput
volume at the Mombasa port will rise to 25.5 million tonnes this year,
up from 22.3 million tonnes handled at the facility in 2013.
Apart
from Kenya, the Mombasa port is also used by the country’s landlocked
neighbours such as Uganda for import and export of both consumer goods
and petroleum products
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