World bank ranks: Kenya second on logistics

World bank ranks: Kenya second on logistics

President Magufuli officially welcomes two Bombardier Q400NG aircraft
Posted September 28, 2016 by Aviation, Tourism and Conservation news - DAILY from Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean islands in Uncategorized. Leave a Comment

COMPETITION SET TO INCREASE IN THE TANZANIAN SKIES

(Posted 28th September 2016)

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The arrival yesterday of the second Bombardier Q400NG in Dar es Salaam went almost unnoticed, completing the first order for new aircraft Tanzania has placed in decades. A few months ago, after an expeditious review of the national airline’s operations and needs to facilitate a revival, had the Tanzanian government ordered two of the most advanced turboprop aircraft on the market, the Bombardier Q400NextGen.

The two 76 seater aircraft with a single cabin all economy layout will be deployed primarily for domestic services across the sprawling East African nation to allow Air Tanzania not only to increase frequencies on key routes out of Dar es Salaam but also to resume services to a number of other airports to which the airline had to halt operations due to lack of serviceable aircraft.

It is here where Air Tanzania will have to compete with Precision Air which operates a fleet of ATR 42 and ATR 72 turboprops and enjoyed a near monopoly on several domestic routes. However, for destinations like Kilimanjaro, Zanzibar, Mwanza and Mbeya will local rival Fastjet, presently undergoing a restructuring and awaiting a major fleet change, be the one to beat, not just on the level of fares but also vis a vis on time performance and offering multiple daily services to these domestic destinations.

The two Q400NG’s join a Bombardier sister ship of Q300 make, bringing the fleet to three aircraft for the time being. However, government sources have already intimated that a further two aircraft orders are under consideration for the first half of 2017, likely to be larger aircraft and very likely also to be of Bombardier make. The most likely choice for those orders could be the CRJ900NG, even though Bombardier might be keen to sell the more advanced C-Series, an aircraft with the arguably best operating economics in its class.

Today, Wednesday, will President Magufuli officially inaugurate the two new aircraft in a ceremony at the Julius Nyerere International Airport, when the two planes are also expected to be given names.

Meanwhile has the Minister of Transport, when a few days ago introducing the new Board of Directors and the new CEO to the public, given them a stern warning that they will have six months to turn the fortunes of the airline around. In the past were both incompetence as well as corrupt practices by senior management leading to a series of suspensions and sackings, leaving the airline debt ridden and its few remaining assets under constant threat by debt collections action on behalf of creditors. It was probably for that reason that the new aircraft have not been put on the asset registry of the airline but will be owned by another state corporation, leaving the new birds beyond reach of auctioneers.

Will the arrival of the two new aircraft mark a new beginning for Air Tanzania? As always only time will tell how a new team at the helm will perform vis a vis operational quality and financial prudence to secure the long term survival of the previously moribund national airline.

Bombardier has with this delivery also increased its African footprint with over 125 aircraft in service, 40 of which are Q400NG’s flying for among others RwandAir, Ethiopian Airlines and Asky.

President Magufuli officially welcomes two Bombardier Q400NG aircraft




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ELECTRICITY
Egbin Power to develop 900 MW gas-fired power plants in Tanzania
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    - Saturday, 01 October 2016 - 16:36

(Ecofin Agency) - Nigerian power developer Egbin Power plans to build in Tanzania, two gas-fired power plants with a total capacity of 900 MW. “We plan to set-up two plants, each generating 450 MW....all we are awaiting now are the government approval and Tanesco's (Tanzania Electric Supply Company) proposal,” the firm’s CEO, Dallas Peavey said.

Details regarding the project’s specifications and exact location have not yet been disclosed. However, the developer said it will invest $630 million in the project highlighting that it is ready to start works as soon as it gets all required approvals.

“We are interested in power generation. We have the expertise and experience from our operations in the United States of America, Argentina, Africa and Europe,” the official told Daily News.

Egbin Power, subsidiary of Nigerian Sahara Group, has a portfolio of 1,320 MW of thermal plants using natural gas.

Gwladys Johnson

Egbin Power to develop 900 MW gas-fired power plants in Tanzania
 
Ànd how does the purchase have tô do with logistics Geza?
 
Quickly, u have to see a 524 km pipeline allowed that investment a Nigerian firm wants to undertake.
 
Quickly, u have to see a 524 km pipeline allowed that investment a Nigerian firm wants to undertake.
Mmemaliza ile kesi nyingine ya ule developer aliyesema mme breach contract. Ondoa habari zisizo husiana na logistics, fungua uzi nyingine
 
Mmemaliza ile kesi nyingine ya ule developer aliyesema mme breach contract. Ondoa habari zisizo husiana na logistics, fungua uzi nyingine
sawa boss pitia hii!

Tanzania Plans to Commission Natural Gas Plant by 2025

Joseph Burite JosephBurite
October 6, 2016 — 8:50 AM CESTUpdated on October 6, 2016 — 10:55 AM CEST
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Tanzania, which has at least 57 trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves, plans to commission a plant by 2025 to process as much as 11.1 trillion cubic feet.

The Ministry of Energy’s plan estimates that the East African nation can recover as much as 70 percent of the resource. It also projects total demand at 32.5 trillion cubic feet over three decades, with 8.8 trillion cubic feet going to power generation, according to a document handed to reporters in the commercial capital, Dar es Salaam.

Tanzania utilizes about 33 billion cubic feet each year to generate 711 megawatts of electricity, according to the document. The nation plans to export at least 3.1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas to East and Southern Africa in the 30 years through 2045 as global prices drop.


“Declining global prices mean regional markets maybe be a better option to monetize the resource,” according to the plan.

Global production of natural gas is forecast to grow 7.6 percent each year to reach 500 million tons per year in 2030, according to the International Gas Union.

“Tanzania should not necessarily start allocating gas ratios as that might encourage the growth of unsustainable industries,” Paul Hogarth, an upstream commercial team leader at London-based BG Group said at a conference in Dar es Salaam Wednesday.

Tanzania Plans to Commission Natural Gas Plant by 2025
 
Tanzania secures $259 mln funding for power grid link with Kenya

Oct 9 Tanzania has secured $258.82 million from the African Development Bank and the Japan International Cooperation Agency for a high voltage electricity line to connect its national power grid to Kenya's, its power utility said on Sunday.

The 400 kilovolt (kV) line will be completed within two years and is part of efforts to deepen integration between the two countries' economies, Tanzania's TANESCO said in a statement on its website.

Kenya has already agreed to pay $50.45 million for work on the link on its side of the border.

Bouygues Energies & Services, Kalpataru Power Transmission Ltd and Energoinvest have been awarded contracts to build the line, TANESCO's statement said. (Reporting by Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala; Editing by George Obulutsa and Louise Ireland)

Tanzania secures $259 mln funding for power grid link with Kenya
 
Gas pipeline lifespan to cover 90 years
ALVAR MWAKYUSA
13 October 2016




542-km gas pipeline from Mtwara to Dar es Salaam


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REGULAR and proper maintenance of the 542-kilometre gas pipeline from Mtwara to Dar es Salaam will extend the lifespan of the conduit from 30 to 90 years; an expatriate for Australia’s consulting firm Worley Parsons, Mr Allan Slowe, said yesterday.

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Worley Parsons Resources and Energy was the consulting engineer for the mega US $1.22 billion dollars project which was undertaken by China Petroleum and Technology Development Company (CPTDC).

The pipeline was inaugurated last year. “The 30-year provision is a contractual obligation but this period can be extended to 90 years with proper and regular maintenance,” Mr Slowe said in Dar es Salaam yesterday during a meeting to brief stakeholders on implementation of the project.

The expatriate noted on the other hand that no incident had been recorded since the pipeline started transporting natural gas from Mtwara to Dar es Salaam for power generation last year.

“There hasn’t been any report of gas leaking or malfunctioning and this tells that the construction work was well implemented,” Mr Slowe, who worked as Project Manager for the consulting firm, remarked.

He noted further that it is the same contractor who implemented the project that will be conducting maintenance of the conduit, as per contract between the Chinese company and the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC).

At the same occasion, the Acting Managing Director of TPDC, Engineer Kapuulya Musomba, said the corporation has been conducting weekly physical inspections along the pipeline.

“Maintenance and regular inspections are crucial to have the pipeline running; every week a team of experts from TPDC makes close inspections of the infrastructure,” he remarked.

Eng Musomba on the other hand took issues with long public procurement procedures which he said are not suitable for the project. “Something may happen along the pipeline which will require fast response including purchase of materials and equipment but this will be held back by the long procurement process,” the Acting TPDC boss stated. He noted that a total of 150 Tanzanians were part of the construction team and have since then amassed experience in operating the tube.

This was confirmed by Vice General Manager of CPTDC, Mr Zhang Hongwei, who explained that apart from on-job training, the Tanzanians received short courses on supervision and maintenance of the project in China.

“Our (Chinese) experts will remain in Tanzania for the next one year after which everything will be handed by Tanzanians,” Mr Hongwei explained.

The Mtwara-Dar es Salaam pipeline and gas processing plants at Madimba and Songo Songo Islands, largely financed by a Chinese loan, is part of a plan to add about 2,000 megawatts of new gasfired electricity generating power by 2018 to increase Tanzania’s generating capacity to 10,000 MW by 2025. Most new plants will be gas-fired but Tanzania also wants to use coal reserves and renewable resources such as wind and geothermal.

Tanzania estimates it has about 55 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of recoverable natural gas reserves off its southern coastline. Discoveries in Tanzanian and Mozambican waters have led to predictions the region could become the world’s third-largest exporter of natural gas.

The government said it hopes by switching to gasfired power plants to save around $1 billion (about 2.1trl-) a year in oil imports for electricity generation through diesel-fired power plants.

Gas pipeline lifespan to cover 90 years

 
Lead investor in Uganda-Tanzania pipeline may get up to 60 pct stake-minister
Thu Oct 13, 2016 3:48pm GMT

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By Gwladys Fouche

OSLO Oct 13 (Reuters) - The private company selected as lead investor in a planned $3.5 billion oil pipeline between Uganda and Tanzania could receive up to a 60 percent stake in the project, a top Ugandan government official said on Thursday.

Tanzania and Uganda plan to finish building a crude oil pipeline by 2020 to ship crude from Uganda's oilfields in the Albertine rift basin. Securing a partnership with a private company is key to the project.

"It (the stake) could be as far as 60 percent for the lead investor. And for us - Uganda and Tanzania - we would share the rest," Peter Lokeris, Uganda's minister of state for mineral development, told Reuters.

"So far we have 16 applications from companies," he said on the sidelines of a Nordic-African business conference in Oslo. He declined to name the companies that had applied.

Uganda also plans to build a $2.5 billion refinery so it can earn more from its oil resources, which it discovered in 2006.

Wrangling over taxes and the viability of the refinery have delayed commercial production, which is now expected to start between 2019-2020.

The Ugandan energy ministry said in July it had ended talks on the refinery with a group led by Russia's Rostec Global after the company made additional demands to a deal reached in May.

The ministry said then that it had begun negotiations on the refinery with an alternate bidder, a consortium led by South Korea's SK Engineering.

"We have opened another round of discussion. There are 21 companies so far. Our discussions are bilateral," Lokeris said on Thursday, declining to identify the companies involved. (Editing by Adrian Croft)

Lead investor in Uganda-Tanzania pipeline may get up to 60 pct stake-minister | News by Country | Reuters
 
Work on Kenya-Tanzania powerline set to begin
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The East and southern African countries are moving closer to a grand plan of sharing power to ensure its reliability and save on costs. FILE | TEA GRAPHIC

In Summary

  • On Tuesday, Kenya signed a contract for an international power supply network which will link East Africa to southern African countries.

  • The project will take 22 months to be completed.


The East and southern African countries are moving closer to a grand plan of sharing power to ensure its reliability and save on costs.

On Tuesday, Kenya signed a contract for an international power supply network which will link East Africa to southern African countries.

The project will take 22 months to be completed.

The agreement for the Kenya – Tanzania interconnector was signed in Nairobi between the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company Limited (Ketraco) and the contractor, North China Power Engineering Company Limited (NCPE).

It is argued that with a capacity to transfer 2,000 megawatts (MW) of energy in either direction, the interconnector will have positive impacts on the development of renewable sources of energy in Kenya and Tanzania.

“The interconnection will also decrease power reserve capacity to be installed as it will enable the sharing of power with the Southern African Power Pool,” said Fernandes Barasa, Ketraco’s chief executive.

Mr Barasa said the Kenya – Tanzania interconnector project would improve power supply, reliability and affordability in Kenya from renewable surplus power from neighbouring countries.

“Together with the completion of the Ethiopia – Kenya and the Lessos – Tororo [Kenya - Uganda] lines, this regional interconnector, power evacuator and system strengthening line will certainly facilitate East and Southern African Power Pool exchange when Kenya and Rwanda receive 400MW and 200MW respectively in 2017 from Ethiopia,” he added.

The East African Power Master Plan (EAPMP) which was developed in 2003 recommended the establishment of a power pool to facilitate electricity trade and joint least cost power development planning in the region.

As a result, member countries are implementing programmes to develop a vibrant regional power exchange market and to accelerate regional interconnection in a bid to increase power consumption.

It is projected that the interconnection between Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania would provide the foundation for large future cross-border electricity flows.

The Kenya – Tanzania interconnector project involves the construction of about 510km of high voltage alternating current (HVAC) transmission line from Kenya to Tanzania, the upgrade of Isinya (Kenya) and Singida (Tanzania) substations as well as construction of the Arusha substation.

On Kenya’s side, it involves the construction of 96km of 400kV transmission line from Isinya substation to the Namanga boarder and the upgrade of the 400/220kV Isinya substation.

The Tanzanian part will involve the construction of a 414km 400kV transmission line from Namanga border to Singida, construction of the 400kV Arusha substation as well as the upgrade of the 220/33kV Singida substation.

The works in Kenya will be financed by the government and African Development Bank (AfDB) at a cost of $4.25 million and $22.42 million respectively, while the Tanzanian project is estimated to cost $258.82 million.

A study by consultancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) shows that cross-border electricity flows will be significant by 2025 and will account for around a third or more of electricity generated.

Currently, cross-border electricity flow is restricted in different power pool regions mainly due to limited interconnection capacity.

Work on Kenya-Tanzania powerline set to begin
 
Dar es Salaam -Kinshasa to become direct link

PARTNERS President Magufuli welcomes President Joseph Kabila recently before holding their talks.


DAR ES SALAAM, TANZANIA - Commercial flights between Dar es Salaam and Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of Congo capital will soon become a reality writes DAMAS MAKANGALE.

“This is after President Joseph Kabila and President John Magufuli of Tanzania agreed to fast- direct flight talks to ease air transport links in the region. Kabila was recently in Tanzania for a state-visit and signed a series of trade related pacts with his host. The countries are also linked by the Central Corridor transit route.

Cross-border trade between the two nations has soared from Tsh.23 billion in 2009 to Tsh.394 billion in 2016.

According to the Central Corridor Transit Transport Facilitation Agency (CCTTFA) Observatory report for 2015, DRC imported 1,194,543 tons of cargo through the Dar es Salaam Port, which represents about 10% of all imports passing through the Port.

Other imports included 62% local (Tanzania), Rwanda 7%, Burundi 3%, Uganda 1% and other non-Central Corridor members 17%. Members of Central Corridor include Tanzania, Uganda, DRC, Rwanda and Burundi.

In 2015 about 25% of exports passing through Dar Port come from DRC. About 65% of exports are from Tanzania. Exports from Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda represent about 1.6% while exports from other non-central corridor members are at 9.4%.

During their bi-lateral discussions the two Heads of States agreed on the following issues: Tanzania has offered an extension of grace period for imports from DRC passing through the Dar es Salaam Port from 14 to 30days;

Tanzania will put in place dedicated Inland Container Terminals (ICDs) at Ruvu, Coast Region and Dodoma for cargo destined to DRC in an effort to fast track cargo clearance.

By Damas Makangale, Monday, October 17th, 2016

http://www.busiweek.com/index1.php?Ctp=2&pI=5698&pLv=3&srI=58&spI=24&cI=19
 
Tanzania, Uganda to revive Lake Victoria transport
DAILY NEWS Reporter
17 October 2016

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UGANDAN government has reiterated its commitment to revive Lake Victoria water transport operations between Uganda and Tanzania in order to lower transportation costs between the two countries.

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Ugandan Minister of State for Transport Mr Aggrey Bagiire said this after meeting the Tanzania Ports Authority (TPA) Director General, Deusdedit Kakoko when the later paid a courtesy call at his office.

According to a statement from Tanzania Ports Authority, the Ugandan minister said they were committed to raise the volumes going through the lake to twenty percent in the next two years by improving ship operations, port and rail infrastructures at Port Bell and the new port of Bukasa which will be built in Kampala.

“It is a directive from Uganda higher authorities that people and goods need to move quickly and cheaply in order to reduce the costs of doing business,” he said adding that implementation of this directive has started by holding technical meetings between the two ministries of Uganda and Tanzania and the Central Corridor Transit Transport Facilitation Agency (CCTTFA).

The Minister called for activation of the rail route between Dar es Salaam and Mwanza. On his part, the TPA Director General said Dar es Salaam- Mwanza route has been revamped by increasing number of wagons and locomotives.

He said the government of Tanzania has secured funds to construct a standard gauge rail system which is now on tender process. “Construction of the rail is expected to be completed in the next three years,” he noted.

He said, once completed, the project will boost the amount of cargo transported through the central corridor and therefore increase the competitive edge of Dar es Salaam port.

He explained that is now embarking on human resources change of mind set to be more customer-focused, increase usage of Information Technology (IT) in documentation processes in order to speed up clearance of goods, enhanced security, investment in infrastructure and marketing of TPA services. The Director General called upon Uganda customers to use Dar es Salaam port.

“The decision to use the central corridor route should base on efficiency, time, cost and convenience…Dar port and the central corridor at large has the competence to serve Uganda than any other port,” he noted.

Also Engineer Kakoko told Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA) that there have been a lot of improvements on the Tanzania roads especially the Mutukula route which is all tarmac to Uganda, hence reducing the transit time to three days.

Members of the Association called on removal of Non- Tariff Barriers (NTBs) along the central corridor roads to allow timely and free movement of goods. The Director General assured the association to direct all their concerns beyond his power of delegation to the relevant authorities for action.

Apart from the one-on-one marketing visit TPA also took part at the 24th Uganda International Trade Fair to showcase its activities.

http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/business/45752-tanzania-uganda-to-revive-lake-victoria-transport

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Dar port and the central corridor at large has the competence to serve Uganda than any other port,” he noted.


bwahahahaha.... danganya toto
 
Is geza posting pictures of Tanzania launch of two propeller planes? Oh man.
 
Geza has completely spoiled this thread,what a loser!!
 
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