Cost comparison SGR Kenya vs SGR Tanzania

Kenya has done a very big mistake to rush into SGR without much exploration about it.

You can not upgrade into electrified SGR while you struggle to get money to pay debt of the already running SGR.

It is going to take so long until you move out of that mess meanwhile the rest of landlocked countries are rushing to Tanzania to be part of the modern electrified SGR.

Truth be told, you always want to be ahead of others in EAC. when we started BRT system , you rushed into marking the roads with paint so that u can deploy this system and being in the frontline of modernity in EAC but you failed.

Now this SGR you rushed into, it is going to embarrass you when the first electrified SGR in EAC start working.




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Hawapendi kusikia hii maneno [emoji3][emoji3]
 
I thought Ethiopian electric sgr is already working midaganyika nini hua inasumbua akili zenyu[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]

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It hurts a lot
 
Who told you we are struggling to pay the current loan?

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I said in EAC if Ethiopia is in EAC then you need an immediate diagnosis of Corona Virus in your brain


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[emoji3][emoji3][emoji3] nilimuacha umalizane nae mwnyw
 
Who told you we are struggling to pay the current loan?

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Don’t you know that you are making loss out of it? Or you tell me that how much profit generated over the last three months? And what percent of it paid the debt? Prove me wrong


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Don’t you know that you are making loss out of it? Or you tell me that how much profit generated over the last three months? And what percent of it paid the debt? Prove me wrong


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Are you through with the first 100 km of your dead SGR? Msikimbizane na Kenya bro.
 
Loss you said? There is nothing annoying like arguing with a lazy fellow who can't spend one second of his time to do some simple research. You dwell in what people say in this forum and you take them seriously. Anyway, sorry for disappointing you.
Don’t you know that you are making loss out of it? Or you tell me that how much profit generated over the last three months? And what percent of it paid the debt? Prove me wrong


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U'll die before that chang'aa boiler makes profit!
 
It has already made profit and I am alive and kicking. What else do you have to say?

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Ethiopia and Kenya are struggling to manage debt for their Chinese-built railways
June 4, 2019

By Yunnan Chen

FROM OUR OBSESSION
Because China
Even small changes in China have global effects.

In the wake of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Forum in Beijing six weeks ago, Ethiopia gained another Chinese debt-concession. China’s second-largest African borrower and prominent BRI partner in infrastructure finance also received a cancellation on all interest-free loans up to the end of 2018. This was on top of previous renegotiated extensions of major commercial railway loans agreed earlier in 2018.

These concessions highlight the continuing debt-struggles that governments have in taking on Chinese large infrastructure projects. But they also demonstrate the advantages and flexibility, that African governments can gain in working with China—if they can leverage it.

Ethiopia’s railway projects have been an instructive case of both the benefits and pitfalls of Chinese finance.

Ethiopia’s railway projects have been an instructive case of both the benefits and pitfalls of Chinese finance. It has been over a year since the Chinese-built and financed Addis-Djibouti standard gauge railway (SGR) opened to commercial service in January 2018. A flagship project of China’s Belt and Road Initiative in the Horn of Africa, and constructed in parallel with Kenya’s showy Chinese-built SGR, the project was Ethiopia’s first railway since a century ago (another urban-rail project, the Addis light-rail transit (LRT) was completed earlier in 2015), as well as being the first fully-electrified line in Africa.

Costing nearly $4.5 billion, the SGR was partly financed through $2.5 billion in commercial loans from China Eximbank, according to figures from SAIS-CARI with further loan packages dedicated to transmission lines and the procurement of rolling stock and locomotives. Part of China’s wider ‘export-supply chain’ strategy, the railway uses a package of Chinese trains, Chinese construction companies, Chinese standards and specifications—and is currently operated under a six-year contract by a joint venture of the two Chinese contractors, CREC and CCECC, who built it.

As part of a wider nine-line railway network plan under the Ethiopian Railway Corporation (ERC), the line cuts travel time from the capital Addis Ababa to Djibouti from two days by road to 12 hours. Passing several industrial zone clusters in Addis Ababa and Dire Dawa, it also serves the government’s wider export-led industrialization strategy, through the strategy of “transit-oriented development”, writ on a national scale.


REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Stewardesses stand in line during the inauguration of the new train line linking Addis Ababa-Djibouti line in October 2016.

But despite these lofty ambitions, the project has been afflicted by technical and financial challenges, calling into question the wisdom of relying on Chinese technology, as well as debt-financing, for major infrastructure. Despite the line’s completion in 2016, delays in the construction of the transmission network held up the railway’s commission, and problems with power outages and technical issues of over-voltage have continue to plague the line in the first year of operation.

Other social challenges have also emerged out of railway design choices: the decision to not erect fencing along rural tracts of the railway (both for cost-saving purposes and a concern to not divide pastoral communities) has led to the regular phenomenon of collisions between the train and livestock, resulting in conflicts over compensation; the railway become a target for blockades in regional ethnic tensions in the last year, leading several instances of disruption to service.

On an economic front, actual uptake of the railway by the industrial zones it was intended to serve remains low—even after a year, the vast majority of the railway’s freight cargo is made up of imports, not exports. Integration with export and industrial zones is low, as the main trunk line does not connect to individual industrial zones, creating significant last-mile shipping and logistics for firms, particularly at port connections. Most exporters continue to use road transport, despite the higher time and financial cost, due to its greater flexibility and reliability compared to the train’s twice-daily schedule.


REUTERS/STRINGER
The flashy Mombasa terminal of the SGR line constructed by the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) and financed by the Chinese government in Kenya

This is a major problem for the railway’s economic prospects. Few passenger-based rail systems in the world are profitable; in developing countries, most railways connect to mines: one of the few bulk goods that can generate returns for such capital-intensive transport.

China also bears these costs. State insurer Sinosure publicly commented on $1 billion in losses written off for the project, and Eximbank has halted previously-discussed funding for the country’s second line, the section from Weldiya to Mekele. Though contracted to another Chinese SOE, CCCC, Ethiopia faces little prospect of further loan finance from China, until the first railway can show demonstrable success.

Further financial challenges afflict the projects, along with Ethiopia’s growing debt burden. A long-term foreign exchange shortage, worsened by poor export performance, has challenged Ethiopia’s ability to repay many of the loans that financed these projects. Repayments on the principal for the Chinese railway loan began in 2017, before the line was even operational. As of the beginning of 2019, the ERC was not only behind in its loan repayments to China, but also unable to front the remainder of the management fees for the Chinese companies operating the railway.

In late 2018, Ethiopia negotiated with Beijing to restructure of the Eximbank loan terms, extending the repayment period from 15 to 30 years.

China’s railway loan concessions to the Ethiopian government also contrast to the other debt-financed railway project the government is constructing: under Turkish contractor Yapi Merkezi, Ethiopia’s second railway line from Awash to Weldiya is still under construction, financed by a consortium of mostly European lenders including Turkish Eximbank and led by Credit Suisse. Despite its delayed Chinese debt repayments, Ethiopia has reportedly never missed a payment to its European creditors, where the penalties to future access to credit are harder.

Despite delayed Chinese debt repayments, Ethiopia has never missed a payment to its European creditors, where penalties are harder.

In this, China’s deep and strategically-tied pocketbook has been a big advantage, allowing Ethiopia to juggle its external obligations and leverage Chinese flexibility where it can. Ethiopia’s renegotiation and rollover of debt indicates that this BRI project is unlikely to have a Hanbantota-esque Chinese takeover. In contrast, Kenya’s Mombasa-Nairobi railway—another Chinese-designed and built SGR which has seen similar concerns over debt-burdens—but curiously has not received similar concessions from China—and has struggled to gain further funding from China for its expansion. Longer-term challenges remain in the national railway’s development and success. Financial concessions buy Ethiopia more time, but the government still faces an ongoing challenge of capacity building for the eventual handover of railway operations to Ethiopian ownership.

China has supported through training exchanges in the form of student exchanges and in the construction of a new railway academy dedicated to vocational staff training—and the case of the light rail transit shows some early success: after three years, daily operation has been entirely localized to Ethiopian staff.

However, the Addis-Djibouti SGR has seen more missed opportunities: the very fact that operations and maintenance were awarded to construction contractors with no actual railway operations experience is indicative of the failure of adequate capacity building during construction. The government too, has learned from this, pressuring Turkish contractors Yapi Merkezi in the Awash-Weldiya rail project much harder on capacity building for ERC engineers and construction staff.

Under Ethiopian premier Abiy, the Horn of Africa country is also learning and adapting in other ways in managing its external partners, increasingly looking to encourage private sector finance and public private partnerships to finance future railway developments.

Outside of railway, though, China remains a viable partner: the recent signing of a new power project still demonstrates the considerable sway that China holds as a financier where other international sources of credit remain scarce. But both sides have been burned: while the strategic discourse of the Belt and Road mean that the SGR will not be abandoned, both lender and borrower now show greater caution in the infrastructure they pour money into.

*The author acknowledges the generous support of SAIS China Africa Research Initiative in funding field research for this article.

Sign up to the Quartz Africa Weekly Brief here for news and analysis on African business, tech and innovation in your inbox

 
So unaniletea ripoti ya 2019 and already we are in 2020[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23] Najua umesearch net nzima umekosa.
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It has already made profit and I am alive and kicking. What else do you have to say?

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NOT AGAIN
Auditor report flags Sh5.5 billion loss at Kenya Railways
Spends Sh14.9 billion in operation costs against revenue earnings of Sh4.3 billion.
In Summary
• An audit report by the Office of the Auditor General further shows the railways parastatal is unable to settle a Sh34 billion accrued debt.
• Auditor General Edward Ouko, in a review of KR accounts for the year ending June 2018, castigated the management after it failed to give reasons for the non-payment.

President Uhuru Kenyatta launches the SGR Cargo train at the port of Mombasa.
Image: FILE

A Sh5.5 billion loss at Kenya Railways has cast doubts on the viability of funds pumped into various parastatals bail them out of cash crises.

An audit report by the Office of the Auditor General further shows the railways parastatal is unable to settle a Sh34 billion accrued debt.

Auditor General Edward Ouko, in a review of KR accounts for the year ending June 2018, castigated the management after it failed to give reasons for the non-payment of the debt.

Taxpayers may have to dig deep into their pockets to foot some of the bills as the entity is yet to employ measures to reverse the trend.

“The conditions are indicative of material uncertainty that may cast significant doubt on the corporation’s ability to continue operating,” Ouko said.

Fears over the viability of SGR and other planned investments persist – especially in Nairobi since KR expended Sh14.9 billion in operation costs against revenue earnings of Sh4.3 billion.

The entity’s major revenue sources are the SGR, concession fees, rent, museum, training institute, investments, and government grants.

Despite the dismal returns of 2018, Kenya is expected to pay Sh18.7 billion to China Development Bank this financial year, being part of the Sh327 billion borrowed for the SGR's first phase.

Works on the second phase of the line from Nairobi to Naivasha is also underway at Sh150 billion.

Apart from the transporter, there are notable failures of state corporations in Kenya, some of which provide key services.

Kenya Meat Commission, KICC, public-sector owned sugar companies, Agricultural Finance Corporation, Kenya Airways, and National Bank are just but a few that have made huge losses.

A number of them are linked to Sh116.8 non-performing loans that the government has been grappling with, some for over 10 years.

Kenya Airways, for instance, has not had a change in fortunes despite getting billions from the government – the last being Sh20 billion it was lent to repay a loan with China’s Afrexim Bank.

Budget reports for the current financial year show that the government wrote off Sh27 billion loans in favour of various state agencies.

Of this, Sh24 billion was owed by KQ – being part of its Sh200 billion debt portfolio amid a Sh7.5 billion loss this fiscal year.
Among them were agencies that have received money from the Exchequer without the investment translating into profits.

Advancements of about Sh3.5 billion to Mumias Sugar is also yet to bear fruit in the wake of the company’s struggles.

The Coffee Board, Pyrethrum Board, Kenya Industrial Estates, Kenya Cooperative Creameries, Uplands Bacon Factory, Postbank, East African Portland Cement, Agrochemicals Company, and Cotton Board are equally struggling.

In explanatory notes, Kenya Railways earned a total of Sh10.8 billion but spent Sh16.4 billion on rail operations and to run offices.

The entity argued that part of the loss, that is about Sh307 million, was as a result of deterioration of property, plant, and equipment.

Kenya Railways blamed its underperformance in the year 2018 on the slow pick up of SGR cargo; low uptake of rental space; locomotive breakdowns, poor track maintenance, and high cost of fuel.

Ouko further queried illegal allocations of 529 parcels of railways land in the face of efforts to repossess only 27.

Worst-case scenarios were reported in Limuru, Kikuyu, and Mombasa where private developers were irregularly allocated
land, some already dotted with permanent structures.

“From the foregoing, I am unable to confirm the accuracy and validity of property valued at Sh24 billion,” the auditor said.

KR was also found in breach after it paid Sh1.043 billion in excess for compensation to project affected persons without supporting documents.

Beneficiaries were expected to present copies of ID, KRA PIN certificate, and title deed surrender from the National Land Commission.

A number of NLC officers led by former chairman Muhammad Swazuri are in court over claims the compensation was inflated.

The auditor reprimanded Kenya Railways for failing to recover Sh8 million, being part of Sh14 million paid to landowners who were entitled to Sh1 million.

(edited by O. Owino)
 
We are in 2020 kijana[emoji23][emoji23]


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Uko na shida kweli[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23] umetoka 2019 ukarudi 2018? Ok, you can post 2002 pia ukipenda[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]
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