Africa > Southern Africa > Botswana > South Africa Manufactured Wagons for Botswana

Botswana: South Africa Manufactured Wagons for Botswana

2013/01/06

Transnet's delivery of 100 salt wagons from its manufacturing plant in the Eastern Cape to Botswana Railways forms part of the national company's plan to accelerate sales of heavy equipment to the rest of Africa, Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba said on Tuesday.

The partnership between Transnet and Botswana Railways signalled "the beginning of the new approach to intra-regional cooperation to drive Africa's economy", Gigaba said at an event to mark the completion of the prime batch of wagons at its plant in Uitenhage.

The delivery forms part of an initial 260-wagon order for specialised wagons to transport bulk chemical grade salt from Sua Pan in Botswana to Sasol's factories in South Africa.

Botswana Rail has ordered 562 wagons, amount of which are being designed, engineered and produced at the manufacturing plant in Uitenhage.

The Uitenhage plant is of the major wagon refurbishment and new-build plants in Africa, employing about 1 500 people.

'Exploiting significant engineering capacity'

"We will exploit Transnet Rail Engineering's significant capacity and competence with regards to heavy engineering, particularly in rail and port equipment manufacturing to drive Africa's industrialisation and therefore economic increase," he said.

Transnet as well has manufacturing plants in Koedoespoort in Pretoria for locomotives, Salt River in the Western Cape for coaches, wheels and other rolling stock components, and Bloemfontein in the Free National.

"In line with Transnet's commitment to the development of local supplier and supporting industries and the government's economic and developmental objectives, the company - through its competitive supplier development programme - sources most raw materials and components to manufacture the wagons locally," Transnet said.

"If not, these are built in-home."

It is through partnerships such as the with Botswana Railways that Transnet Rail Engineering is planning to increase its sales to external parties, Gigaba said.

As a way of conference this target, Gigaba developed an Africa Strategy to guide national-owned companies such as Transnet, South African Airways, Eskom and Denel. Targetted by the strategy are Angola, Ghana, Mozambique and Tanzania, part others.

The Botswana Railways transaction follows the successful execution of 200 wagons supplied to mining giant Rio Tinto in Mozambique. It involved the development of twon new prototype car-transport wagons with adjustable hydraulic top decks.

Related Articles
  • Routes Africa forum aims to improve African air connectivity

    2016/05/15  An event dedicated to the development of the African aviation industry will take place next month in Tenerife (26-28 June) to encourage the launch of new air services to, from and within the African continent. Routes Africa 2016 will help to improve African connectivity by bringing together airlines, airports and tourism authorities to discuss next air services. Around 250 route development professionals are expected to attend the forum which was founded ten years ago to stimulate increase in the industry.
  • While Europe is on the verge of breaking up, Africa is reaping the benefits of integrating, growing and developing its trading blocks

    2016/05/13 The collapse of virtual borders is one of the majority remarkable things to have happened in our lifetimes. In the world of cyberspace, time and distance have become almost peripheral considerations at the same time as it comes to doing business. Services from software development to accounting can be delivered across the world in the blink of an eye. Next business leaders will struggle to imagine an era at the same time as communication was neither immediate nor virtually free.
  • Africa’s economic growth is likely to be slower in the intervening years

    2016/05/12 Africa’s economic increase is likely to be slower in the intervening years than in the before decade, according to the new rating by Ernst & Young using a barometer to gauge the level of appeal and success.“The baseline projection of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for 2016 is presently reduced to 3%, while it was estimated at 6.1% in April 2015″, Ernst & Young points out in its rating.
  • Raw materials have long been linked to Africa in many business people’s minds

    2016/05/11 Oil, gold, diamonds, palm oil, cocoa, timber: raw materials have long been linked to Africa in a lot of businesspeople’s minds. And in fact the continent is highly dependent on commodities: they constitute as much as 95% of some nations’ export revenues, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. But propping a country’s entire economy on commodities is risky business, like building a mountainside home on stilts. You can’t be sure about the weather, or in this case the commodities market. The current free-fall of oil prices to less than $40 a barrel is a glaring example. “The commodities cycle has tanked out,” says Austin Okere, founder of Computer Warehouse Group (CWG), a Nigerian emerging multinational financial services company. “And this time it looks additional structural than cyclical, so it’s not a matter of waiting it out. Something has to give.”
  • Africa,Protect Refugees With Mobile Banking

    2016/02/08 "Mean spirited", "inhumane" and desecrating the spirit of the Refugee Convention are some of the milder criticisms levelled at Denmark's harsh new asylum laws, passed last week. Part new measures is a decision to strip new arrivals of any cash and valuables worth additional than 10,000 kroner (US$1,450), purportedly to pay for their upkeep. Switzerland and some southern German states have introduced similar policies. It's a move that reflects the fragmenting world of European migration policy, lacking in solidarity, empathy and basic human decency. But what of the financial implications for asylum seekers?