Nairobi/Dar es Salaam. Kenya and Tanzania yesterday
announced a number of trade deals on the first day of President Samia
Suluhu Hassan’s first official visit to Nairobi, highlighting the two
neighbouring countries’ readiness to turn the page on recent squabbles
that have impeded cross-border flow of investments.
President Samia
Suluhu Hassan and her Kenyan counterpart Uhuru Kenyatta agreed to
strengthen trade and economic relations and re-energise the Joint
Commission on Cooperation. They listed two crucial agreements they hope
will thaw icy relations and unlock trade ties.
The two neighbouring
countries also agreed to strengthen cooperation in tourism, transport
and logistics, and revive plans to build a natural gas pipeline between
Dar es Salaam and Mombasa.
They also expressed commitment to
cooperating in culture, social integration and national heritage, as
well as security matters as part of the fight against terrorism.
President
Hassan said it was her desire to see the two countries cement their
trade and economic ties to bolster trade volume and eventually shape the
economies of Tanzania and Kenya.
The two heads of state signed a
memorandum of understanding in natural gas transportation, which Nairobi
hopes will enhance “energy sufficiency.”
The deal will allow
respective ministers to start negotiating the design, timelines and cost
of a pipeline meant to deliver gas to Mombasa from Tanzania’s nascent
natural gas industry.
Tanzania has an estimated 57 trillion cubic
feet of natural gas in combined wells on mainland and offshore findings
that could help Kenya ease its own access to what is seen as a cleaner
source of energy for homes and industries. But the country, under
President Hassan, must now work faster to agree its own revenue sharing
arrangements with foreign gas companies, crucial to ensure a pipeline
can be set up.
Kenya and Tanzania on Tuesday signed a deal to start
working on a gas pipeline from Dar es Salaam to Mombasa in what the two
countries’ leaders said was part of a long-term project to share energy
resources.
“That should ease the cost of power to ensure that our
industries can access cheaper energy that is also environmentally
friendly,” President Kenyatta told a joint press conference at State
House in Nairobi.
No timelines were given, but President Hassan said
respective technocrats have been directed to start working on the
project immediately.
“That is a long-term project and we are thankful
that today we have signed an agreement and what remains is
implementation,” she said.
“We have agreed on the need to ease the
transportation of key energy resources and we have reached one such
understanding on the transportation of gas. What we need to do now is
start implementing the project.”
A dispatch from State House in
Nairobi said Nairobi is keen on the gas importation as part of its wider
programme to curb pollution by increasing usage of cleaner energy.
“Kenya
is keen on importing natural gas from Tanzania to run our industries.
Natural gas is a clean energy source, which will contribute to the
mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and is in line with our
commitment to reduce our carbon footprint and protect our environment,”
the dispatch said.
The two leaders also signed an MOU on Cooperation
in Culture, Arts, Social Integration and National Heritage. “This will
help us tap into our rich and diverse African cultures for the growth
and transformation of our two countries,” the communique said.
President
Hassan is on her first State visit to Nairobi since she took power in
March following the death of President John Pombe Magufuli. The tour is
laden with diplomatic significance, with businesses hoping that the two
leaders’ rapprochement will help sort out perennial cross-border trading
difficulties.
Yesterday, the two leaders vowed to resume work on connecting infrastructure.
“We have agreed to speed up work on the main highway between Malindi through Lungalunga to Bagamoyo,” President Kenyatta said.
“We
also agreed that we will work on resumption of transportation services
on Lake Victoria, which were useful in movement of people and goods from
Jinja to Kisumu and to Mwanza and Bukoba.”
President Kenyatta added
that the two countries must build on their close cultural and historic
ties to ensure the people benefit from interactions.
“We are excited
to welcome you here because we see you as our sister and Tanzania and
Kenya are one thing,” President Kenyatta said.
“This time, we intend
to go as far as strengthening our relations. My pledge is to continue
working side by side with you to ensure the vision of our founding
fathers is attained,” the Kenyan leader added, referring to both
countries’ common language, history and the fact that they had been
initial creators of the East African Community.
The last such State
visit had been in 2016 by President Magufuli. It was also the last time a
Joint Commission on Cooperation sat. The Commission’s near-death
allowed non-tariff barriers, such as a mismatch on Covid-19
certification, to crop up.
“We have agreed to continue addressing
some of the challenges especially non-tariffs barriers that keep
cropping up at our border points,” President Hassan admitted.
“We
agree that those challenges need to go and we directed that our Joint
Commission on Cooperation should be sitting regularly to resolve these
issues.
“The most important is for our Ministers of Health to sit and
agree on a harmonised protocol to ease movement and entry of our
people.”
Tanzania is traditionally one of Kenya’s biggest trading
partners in Africa, worth about Sh945 billion a year in volume of trade
between them. Some 513 companies from Kenya have invested in Tanzania
with $1.7 billion worth of capital and employing some 51,000 Tanzanians.
On the other hand, 30 Tanzanian firms have invested in Kenya worth
Sh400 billion and employing 2,040 Kenyans.
With tensions between
them, however, issues of work permits and other targeted restrictions
have made it harder for Kenyans to do business in Tanzania. President
Hassan vowed to reverse the trend. “I have pledged here today that
Tanzanians will now come in full swing to invest here so we can grow our
volume of trade.
“We have agreed on how we can grow trade and
investment between us. As you may know, our countries have untapped
potential in agriculture, industrialisation, fisheries, livestock
keeping and tourism.
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