Rwanda claims South Sudan has been given priority to connect to the SGR line from Kenya at its expense. PHOTO | FILE
By MICHAEL WAKABI
In Summary
- Rwanda claims South Sudan has been given priority to connect to the SGR line from Kenya at its expense.
As they prepare to converge for their quarterly
infrastructure summit in Nairobi early next month, Presidents Paul
Kagame, Uhuru Kenyatta and Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni, will present the
usual picture of easy camaraderie as they push the region’s core
infrastructure agenda.
However, a rare public rebuke in which President Kagame
questioned Kampala’s haste to connect Juba to the Northern Corridor SGR
network during the June summit, gave a hint of the lingering rivalries
and hard economic calculations that are informing individual decisions
among the partners.
President Kagame wondered why Uganda was giving priority to
developing an SGR connection to South Sudan, which is yet to become an
EAC member, at the expense of Kigali, which has all along been proactive
in promoting the regional project.
Although South Sudan was looped in recently, the Northern
Corridor SGR project was originally conceived to offer an efficient rail
connection between the port of Mombasa and Burundi, but dithering by
Bujumbura saw the three partners push ahead.
The EastAfrican has learnt that without President Kagame’s
intervention, the SGR connection to Kigali ranked a distant third, or
even fourth in Kampala’s priority.
Kigali would have had to wait until as late as 2020 for the development of the Kampala-Bihanga-Mirama Hills line.
“The thinking was that in both economic and financial terms,
because of the challenging terrain south of Bihanga and distance to
Mirama hills, Uganda would be required to shoulder a bigger financial
burden than Rwanda to develop this connection and yet at the end of the
day we would have to share Rwanda bound traffic with Tanzania,” said an
official familiar with the deal.
Privately, Ugandan planners believe that planned SGR
developments by Tanzania and Burundi offer a cheaper and a more natural
connection for Rwanda because of favourable terrain that translates into
a lower development cost.
According to studies Uganda conducted in 2009 ahead of the
rehabilitation of the Tororo Pakwach metre gauge line, even then, the
northern route trumped the western Kampala-Kasese line in viability, a
variable that would not change even when Uganda decided to upgrade to
the standard gauge.
Oil production
Officials familiar with the study say anticipated oil production
and the need to divert oil industry related traffic from road to rail
returned better numbers for the northern line.
When South Sudan-bound traffic was factored in, the numbers
tilted heavily in favour of the Malaba-Gulu-Nimule Pakwach line. Uganda
expects to begin the ramp up to oil production in the 2018-20 timeframe
and having an SGR connection in place would capture much of the
associated traffic.
Mombasa port statistics show that South Sudan accounts for the
second largest volume of transit cargo after Uganda. According to
figures for the five years to 2014, Uganda bound traffic through the
port averaged 77 per cent of gross transit volumes followed by South
Sudan at 11.5 per cent and Rwanda third at 3.9 per cent.
According to Charles Kateba, managing director of Uganda
Railways, after considering all the factors, Kampala concluded that in a
limited resource setting, the route to Nimule and Pakwach would not
only attract a lower development cost because of an even terrain but
also had better long-term viability than the Kigali line.
“While there is a sentimental attachment to South Sudan and a
need to draw it south for both political and economic considerations,
the northern line promised immediate economic and financial benefits for
Uganda,” Mr Kateba said.
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