Tanzania dreams big with port project at former slave harbour... seen as JK port legacy project

Tanzania dreams big with port project at former slave harbour... seen as JK port legacy project

nngu007

JF-Expert Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2010
Posts
15,860
Reaction score
5,801
* Nations vie to build biggest East Africa port
* Many doubt viability of Tanzania port project


BAGAMOYO, Tanzania, March 15 (Reuters) - In its heyday, Bagamayo was a gateway to the heart of Africa for colonisers, with trade goods surging in from the Indian Ocean, and timber, ivory and countless slaves exported from the east coast harbour.


Then Bagamoyo, which looks out towards the island of Zanzibar, fell on lean times for more than a century. Now Tanzania plans an $11 billion project to make it the region's biggest port and an engine of Africa's boom.


The Chinese-backed project would dwarf Kenya's port at Mombasa, east Africa's trade gateway some 300 km (180 miles) to the north, and include an industrial zone and rail and road links to capitalise on growth in a region hoping to exploit new oil and gas finds.


"It will be the engine for economic activity not only for Bagamoyo but for the entire region," said district executive Ibrahim Matovu, speaking from offices overlooking beaches where ship-builders hammer out wooden dhows as they have for centuries.


Many doubt the plan can succeed and ask if Bagamoyo is even the right location for a port, given it is just 75 km (50 miles) up the coast from Dar es Salaam and far from gas deposits off Tanzania's southern coast.


Politics also plays a role.


President Jakaya Kikwete comes from Bagamoyo and many see the port as his legacy project
. But a groundbreaking ceremony was delayed from July and the project is unlikely to be revived during an election season that culminates in October, when his successor will be chosen.


In addition, Tanzania faces a budget crunch and has been cutting infrastructure spending and the country lacks a credit rating, making borrowing more costly.


China Merchant Holding International has been joined by Omani sovereign wealth fund, the State General Reserve Fund, on the project but there has been little progress on building the infrastructure. The companies could not be reached for comment.


Critics say the project is too much too soon for a nation with solid growth but big infrastructure gaps
.


Instead, they say the government should focus on improving Dar es Salaam's port, which handles 90 percent of exports and is growing at 10 percent per year.


"Unfortunately, I think they lost a bit of focus. There is a need for more coordination and clear direction on priority projects," said Jacques Morisset, the World Bank's lead country economist.


Tanzania, a former socialist state, is struggling to shake its image as aid-dependent and corrupt. Last month, the acting port authority director was suspended amid a corruption inquiry, two years after his predecessor was similarly ousted.


"WHITE ELEPHANT"


Across the region, fast-growing economies have launched infrastructure projects at a scale unprecedented in most of Africa.


Many are hitting bottlenecks. Kenya, east Africa's top economy, is upgrading Mombasa port and says it plans to move ahead with a long-delayed megaport in Lamu, an ancient Arab trading post near the border with Somalia.


The Bagamoyo plan, 10 km from Bagamoyo town, a tentative U.N. World Heritage site which has the crumbling remains of a slave market and other remnants of the East African slave trade, was unveiled during a visit of the Chinese premier in 2013.


It is meant to ease congestion in Dar es Salaam and transform a depressed area into a trade and manufacturing hub. Yet there are practical difficulties, not least that Bagamoyo's port, unlike Dar es Salaam's, would most likely need regular, extensive dredging.


"Bagamoyo is a really good example of a white elephant," said one analyst who focuses on infrastructure. "If you're going to have two major ports, then isn't the place to have it in the south, where the gas is?"


Tanzania has up to 53.28 trillion cubic feet of off-shore gas, putting it on par with some Middle East producers
, but it has yet to construct a liquefied natural gas plant.


Plans to upgrade Tanzania's central corridor rail line that connects mineral-rich Democratic Republic of the Congo to the coast are moving slowly.


"If you improve only the ports without improving the railway, you are not doing anything," Shaaban Mwinjaka, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Transport, told Reuters.


"PEOPLE, THEY HOPE"


In the meantime, Dar es Salaam has problems of its own. The World Bank recently issued a stark assessment of the efficiency of a port expected to reach capacity within a decade.


Last September, the Bank signed a $565 million deal to nearly double Dar's capacity by 2020.


"If the port was as efficient as Mombasa, which is certainly not a great benchmark, the country would make almost $2 billion profit gain per year," said World Bank economist Morisset.


At the port, in Tanzania's biggest city, warehouses are being raised to handle more goods and machinery is being brought in to convert general cargo wharfs into container terminals, while there are plans to deepen two berths to make way for bigger ships.


Back in Bagamayo, artisans sip tea as they wait for the odd tourist to amble by.


"They've been talking about this (port) project for so, so long, but there's no action," said Rast Mwite, a painter who sells leather sandals and chairs cut from coconut wood. "But people, they hope."



(Additional reporting by Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Robin Pomeroy)

 
Sorry to say if one reads this article it us clear the author is simply negative about the whole project. Ofcourse there are challenges involved but you cannot simply dismiss the whole thing as white elephant. I believe bagamoyo is a good deal for our country's economy. Where will Dar be in the next ten to twenty years? We need to think big. But these so called experts still assume and believe that for country like ours should not plan in advance. we reject all these kind of stupid advice from so called experts.
 
This seems a Kenyan. Why both with our country? You haven't done with yours. Please stay far from us. We shall handle it.
 
Sorry to say if one reads this article it us clear the author is simply negative about the whole project. Ofcourse there are challenges involved but you cannot simply dismiss the whole thing as white elephant. I believe bagamoyo is a good deal for our country's economy. Where will Dar be in the next ten to twenty years? We need to think big. But these so called experts still assume and believe that for country like ours should not plan in advance. we reject all these kind of stupid advice from so called experts.


The guy didn't say we don't need this port.Instead he discussed the sustainability of the project as for now it lacks strategic planning to sound economic reasonable...,
1.First why not mtwara where there tons of gas reserves ,
2.Second,Bagamoyo is just few miles from Dar port why not improve Dar port and built new port at Mtwara region?
3.Third,building $11bil port should go toe to toe with improving infrastructures that connect to landlocked countries ,that is sustainability of the port project(Katibu miundombinu suggested the same) otherwise is a big white elephant...for real.
 
Sorry to say if one reads this article it us clear the author is simply negative about the whole project. Ofcourse there are challenges involved but you cannot simply dismiss the whole thing as white elephant. I believe bagamoyo is a good deal for our country's economy. Where will Dar be in the next ten to twenty years? We need to think big. But these so called experts still assume and believe that for country like ours should not plan in advance. we reject all these kind of stupid advice from so called experts.
Upgrade Dar which is a natural port and does not need dredging. This is just an opportunity for CCM crooks to fatten their pockets and for El Professor Chino to build up his home turf.
 
For those of us who know Bagamoyo in comparing with Singapole port,we think that the project is viable since the Baga ports could handle multiple number of ships (in the same way to the singapore port) vs Dar ports with limited wharfs/berths.Dar have only 8 berths and the entrance can allow only a ship at a time whereas in Bago port we can have as many berths as we wish becouse of its natural landscape with unlimited opportunities.To us, the project should really be given utmost consinderation and kickstart as early as possible.If you are wellwisher, bravo for the project and dont snub us. Nadhani baada ya miaka 10 Bandari hii ikifanyakazi wale watakaokuwepo wataiona Tanzania Mpya.Mungu Bariki Tanzania Yetu
 
Back
Top Bottom