TANZANIA International Container Terminal (TICTS) has invested 40bn/- in purchase of two new quay cranes to boost performance at the Dar es Salaam port.
TICTS Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Paul
Wallace, speaking in Dar es Salaam yesterday, described the investment
as the company’s response to customer demands for facility upgrades at
the country’s busy port.
“Owing to globalisation and economies of
scale, vessels are increasingly becoming larger, requiring deeper
water, longer quays and bigger cranes,” said the CEO.
The newly procured cranes, scheduled for
delivery by the year end and described as larger than those delivered
in 2014 and 2011, will comfortably handle 5000teu vessels, significantly
improving performance at the port
“Once seen as inefficient, TICTS is now
driving levels of efficiency not previously experienced at the port...it
has more than doubled its operational performance,” said Mr Wallace,
assuring that days of seeing containerships off Coco Beach have long
gone.
He said the upgrade in cranes was just
the beginning of an ambitious expansion drive to enable the port
accommodate even larger vessels simultaneously.
“We need to expand our footprint,
seriously open up the port and build a long quay on deep water to
accommodate larger vessels simultaneously,” he said, underscoring the
need for concerted efforts to develop the national port as a large
international hub, opening up trade to small regional ports like
Zanzibar, Tanga and Pemba.
Despite the seasonal downturn in
business volumes that the Dar es Salaam port is going through, Mr
Wallace expressed confidence over the bouncing back of business.
“We have to build now and take hold of
our future ... Dar port is best placed as we are geographically situated
in a great location, right on the shipping lanes,” he said, noting that
investment in the use of rail was inevitable to connect the landlocked
countries, which depend on Dar as their window to global trade.
TICTS, which is managed by Hutchison
Ports, a global port operator with 48 ports spanning 25 countries, has
invested 200bn/- in new assets over the past 10 years and remains keen
to expand under Public Private Partnership with its landlord, Tanzania
Ports Authority.
“We simply need more cohesion with all stakeholders to make our port a great trading hub once again,” said Mr Wallace.
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