A section of a railway line in Tanzania. The country plans to upgrade its rail network in the next five years. PHOTO | FILE
Written by FINNIGAN WA SIMBEYE
STRUGGLING Tanzania Zambia Railways
Authority (TAZARA) may soon sign a lucrative concession agreement to
ship over 1.6 million tonnes of cargo between Dar es Salaam and New
Kapiri Mposhi in Zambia starting this year.
Tazara Public Relations Officer, Regina
Tarimo said the management of the railway line was studying the DSM
Corridor Group offer and was likely to welcome the deal which may help
revive its cargo business.
“It’s a promising deal for our company which needs more cargo shipments annually,” she noted.
The DSM Corridor Group Chief Executive
Officer, Erik Kok told the ‘Daily News’ last week that his company is
constructing a dry port at Kisarawe to escape from the traffic congested
Dar es Salaam port.
“By taking cargo to Kisarawe dry port
and then through Kibaha by trucks will reduce time and costs compared to
the current route,” said Mr Kok whose company handled over 1.6 million
tons of cargo last year which is over 10 per cent of the 14 million tons
handled by Dar es Salaam port.
Kok said DSM Corridor Group is in talks
with Tazara management to get a deal that will enable cargo from
Kisarawe to be shipped to DR Congo, Malawi and Zambia to reduce freight
charges.
Tazara has capacity of transporting some
five million metric tonnes of cargo per annum, but currently only
handles less than 400,000 metric tonnes due to poor infrastructure and
competition from trucks.
It is expected that the DSM Corridor
deal will enable the cash strapped railway company improve its books of
accounts. The DSM Corridor Group CEO said last year they used Tazara to
ship copper from Zambia to Dar es Salaam port which went smoothly.
He commended the government and
development partners for launching the 593 million US dollars over
1.1bn/- Dar es Salaam Maritime Gateway Modernisation (DMGM) project.
“We hope that the project will address
the issue of infrastructure improvement especially roads from the port
such as that of Gate 3 and also those going to ICDs (Inland Container
Depots),” he noted while stressing that expansion and modernisation of
the country’s prime port should be given priority.
He said poor roads are prohibiting cargo trucks from carrying maximum capacity of their load because of fears of accidents.
In a recent statement, DSM Corridor
Group said it was undertaking the construction of an inland bulk
handling terminal with the purpose of handling different bulk
commodities and dangerous goods.
The company has acquired 80,000 square
metres of land to develop. The first warehouse of 4,500 square metres is
well underway and the new terminal will be linked to Tazara railway
system
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