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Summary
· This comes after the government revealed last year that it had obtained Sh650 billion in financing from development partners for the fourth and fifth stages, respectively
Dar es Salaam. The government has started negotiating with the Green
Climate Fund (GCF) to acquire $260 million for the implementation of phase six
of the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project.
The move aims at ensuring that
phases four, five, and six are executed concurrently. This comes after it was
announced last year that the government had secured Sh650 billion in financing
from development partners for the implementation of the fourth and fifth
phases, respectively. The minister of state in the President’s Office, Regional
Administration and Local Government (PO-RALG), Ms Angela Kairuki, made the
revelation at the weekend during her visit to inspect the progress of BRT
infrastructure here.
She said the government was
currently negotiating with GCF to establish the possibility of concurrently
implementing the three phases until 2025.
“The government is working hard to ensure the
three BRT phases are implemented concurrently,” said Ms Kairuki, who expressed
the government’s confidence that the project will act as a learning point for
other countries.
Dar es Salaam Rapid Transit Agency
(Dart) chief executive officer (CEO) Edwin Mhede said in December last year
that the World Bank had extended $97.7 million (Sh219 billion) for
implementation of the fourth phase between Tegeta through Bagamoyo and Ali Hassan
Mwinyi roads and Bibi Titi Road in the city centre.
He said the government also secured
178 million euros (Sh427 billion) from the French Development Agency (AFD) for
the construction of phase five, which will start at the Kijazi Interchange in
Ubungo through Mandela Road, which will have a branch to Segerea.
Dart’s system planning and design
manager, Mr Fanuel Kalugendo, said soon Dart will engage contractors to
undertake work on the fourth and fifth phases of the city’s bus rapid transit
BRT network. “We have already found the contractor to start the construction of
BRT phase four, once the signing of the contract is finalised, construction
will soon start. Also, we have also secured a place in Kigamboni to construct a
BRT college and extend some of the feeder roads,” he said.
The Local Government Affairs
Committee chairman, Mr Dennis Londo, argued for Dart to collaborate with
government institutions such as the Tanzania Rural and Urban Agency (Tarura),
the Tanzania National Roads Agency (Tanroads), and urban planners in including
reserve roads in the implementation of BRT projects.
According to him, the move would
avoid inflation in compensation costs that the government incurs during the
execution of such projects. “Dart, in collaboration with Tanroads and Tarura,
should come up with a succession plan to pass leadership roles down to the
youth and to focus on technology,” he said. Mr Londo directed the government to
involve local companies that will ultimately collaborate with foreigners in the
implementation of BRT projects for the sake of benefiting the country in the
area of technology transfer.
The delegation visited the
23.6-kilometre BRT Phase III project stretching from Nyerere-Gongolamboto Road
to the city centre and a section of Uhuru Road from Tazara to Kariako-Gerezani.
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