SA aims to become train manufacturer
30 May 2012
South Africa is on track to become a manufacturer of locomotives for the rest of
Africa, Transnet chief executive Brian Molefe said in Cape Town on Tuesday.
Briefing Parliament's portfolio committee on economic development on the parastatal's R300-billion market demand strategy, Molefe said the R4-billion that Transnet planned to spend over the next seven years on research and development in rail and ports equipment would help develop a locally driven manufacturing industry.
The parastatal's target is to purchase 62% of its goods and services
required for its new infrastructure projects locally.
Already 62% of the content of the 141 locomotives bought from General Electric had
been
spent on local content, and South Africa already manufactured and
exported wheel parts for locomotives.
Investment
Over the next seven years, Transnet will acquire 1 317 locomotives and
manufacture 25 000 wagons in
South Africa, to be used to ship cars and minerals,
said Transnet Freight Rail chief executive Siyabonga Gama.
Molefe said the parastatal had
invested R118-billion in infrastructure in the last seven years, but will almost triple
this to R300-billion in the next seven.
The parastatal will also expand the tonnage of iron ore and coal for export
transported, from 53-million to 83-million tons and 59-million to 74-million tons
respectively, while moving the number of containers handled from 4.3-million to 7.6-
million.
Last year Transnet invested R24.6-billion, as part of the R300-billion
programme, and will invest R31.2-billion this year, with investments peaking at
R56.3-billion in 2016/17.
A total of R4.2-billion will be spent on small business promotion over the next seven
years, and the parastatal will work with suppliers to meet the government's
transformation and empowerment objectives, he said.
Job
creation
About 99 000 jobs are expected to be created in this year, peaking at
136 000 in the 2016/17 year and totalling about 588 000 jobs over the next seven
years.
The majority of jobs will be created in KwaZulu-Natal, backed by developments in
the
Port of Durban, the biggest port in Africa, where R38.5-billion will be spent, and
Richards Bay, the biggest coal terminal in Africa and the Middle East, where R49.9-
billion will be spent.
A total of R3.9-billion will be invested in expanding the container capacity at the
Cape Town harbour, and the Ngqura Container Terminal at the Port of Ngqura near
Port Elizabeth will also be expanded by adding four container berths.
Transnet's other major programmes include expanding rail capacity to meet market
demand by increasing the export of coal, iron ore and manganese and completing
a new multi-product pipeline.
Infrastructure
Molefe said about 58% of the
R300-billion infrastructure spend would go towards
new infrastructure and new rail and locomotives, while among Transnet's divisions,
general freight and freight rail would get R151-billion.
The investments in rail and freight include updating a line from Sishen to Port
Elizabeth as part of the R25.9-billion to be spent on a South Corridor linking the
Eastern Cape to the rest of the country.
The line is necessary for South Africa to increase manganese production, particularly
as the country has 80% of manganese reserves, but only 20% of market share.
The rail line from Sishen to the Port of Ngqura will be routed
from Sishen to Kimberley, where the existing Cape Town to Johannesburg line will link
it to De Aar; from there it will then route to Port of Ngqura, via Cradock and
Alicedale.
The 232km stretch of line between Kimberly and De Aar will be doubled.
Upgrades
A further R28.6-billion will be spent upgrading
the railway line between Sishen and
Saldanha, while a proposed 146km new line between Lothair via Nerston to
Sidvokodvo will help link Gauteng to Richards Bay through Swaziland.
Existing rail networks in the Waterberg region, which contains 40% of the
country's coal reserves, will also be upgraded.
Molefe said the new 555km-long, 24-inch thick, multi-product pipeline, which will
replace the existing Durban to Johannesburg pipeline, was on track to be completed
by the end of 2013.
The new pipeline will increase nearly double capacity from 4.4-billion litres to 8.4-
billion litres.
The trunk line between Durban and Jameson Park was commissioned in January, and
348-million litres of diesel were transported through the pipeline between January
and March.
Three 16-inch pipelines in the northern network were commissioned last year and up
to March this year, 1.2-billion litres of product had been transported through the
pipeline.
Other countries were already approaching South Africa to learn from the
mistakes Transnet had made in rolling out the pipeline, according to Molefe.
These mistakes included the cost of the pipeline more than doubling and
environmental
hitches when frogs were found in swamps and mountain rocks, which meant
engineers had to expand the circumference of the pipe.
Funding
Molefe said 70% of capital investment would be funded from operating cashflows,
with the remainder to be raised on the domestic market.
This would mean Transnet would have to borrow R14.1-billion this year - peaking at
R20.5-billion in 2015/16 - before cashflow turns positive
in 2018/19 and returns R7.1-billion.
Molefe said one of the biggest risks going forward for Transnet's infrastructure
programme was the financial situation in Europe, which could affect borrowing from
capital markets.
Source: BuaNews