THE Tanzania-Zambia Railway Authority (TAZARA) needs about US$250 million of investments in the short term and about US$1.2 billion in the long term, to get back to peak performance, Managing Director, Bruno Ching’andu, has said.
He said in Dar es Salaam on Tuesday that
with that level of investment in the track, equipment and rolling
stock, the target was a breakeven volume of freight of 600,000 tonnes
per annum in the short-run and two million tonnes in the next five
years.
“The private sector can take advantage
of the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) models to partner with us in the
running of the Dar es Salaam Commuter Train, whose demand is massive
and cannot be satisfied at the moment, he said during a presentation to
the 7th East and Central Africa Roads and Rail Summit 2016.
He called on private investors to
partner with TAZARA in order to achieve the desired investments,
assuring the gathering that the two shareholding governments were in the
process of revising the TAZARA Act in order to make the company more
commercially viable and attractive to private players.
“We are also open to PPPs in the
installation of the signaling and telecommunication systems, which have
been vandalised over the years and are currently non-existent,” he said.
The Managing Director also highlighted
PPP investment opportunities in TAZARA’s quarries and workshops, which
he pointed out as having huge potential but required re-investment in
equipment.
Eng Ching’andu informed the audience
about a number of measures that TAZARA had taken in the last six months
with a view to reclaiming the market share of the available cargo
destined to or originating from Malawi, Zambia and the Democratic
Republic of Congo, cargo that was directly captive to TAZARA.
Amongst the measures, Eng Ching’andu
stated that TAZARA had transformed the application of freight rates by
adopting a more flexible tariff regime that was responsive to macro
economic conditions and market trends.
He highlighted that the firm had also
enhanced rebranding efforts, position itself closer to the customers and
forging strategic alliances with neighbouring railway operators, the
Port of Dar es Salaam, shippers and other logistics firms.
The Managing Director pointed out that
TAZARA’s most desired goal was to make meaningful contributions to the
development of the economies of Tanzania and Zambia.
“With the current level of interactions
and closer dealings with the various stakeholders, we are optimistic
that TAZARA’s huge potential to contribute to the economies of Tanzania
and Zambia will be realised soon,” said Eng Ching’andu.
He said that not only was he aware that
TAZARA required substantive investment in many areas in order to achieve
the goals that have been set out, but he was also confident that there
were enough interventions in the pipeline to address the challenges that
would enable TAZARA to perform at its peak.
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