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Road/Rail Freight

‘Open rail industry could turbocharge artisan training in SA’

27 Jul 2021
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Opening South Africa’s rail network to third-party operators will provide further impetus to the country’s ongoing efforts to develop scarce artisan skills and meet the National Development Plan’s target of training 30 000 artisans a year by 2030.

That’s the view of James Holley, CEO of independent rail operator Traxtion, who says that in order to achieve this it is critical that government moves ahead rapidly with its plans to grant third-party access to the core rail network within the next 12 months, as President Cyril Ramaphosa highlighted in his Economic Recovery Plan last October.

Under this policy, private freight rail operators will be allowed to operate on the state-owned rail infrastructure alongside Transnet.

Holley said that opening the rail network to third-party operators would potentially create thousands of jobs and training opportunities as rail operators rapidly scaled up their investments in rolling stock and infrastructure to meet pent-up demand.

“Right now, Traxtion’s own training centre in Rosslyn is producing around 20 fully qualified artisans every three/five years, with the capacity to expand this to 200 given the necessary demand. This is in addition to the train drivers that we also train; we have trained more than 500 drivers. If you look at the number of specialised skills that an open rail environment would create, this will provide a major stimulus for skills and employment creation in the industry and beyond,” said Holley.

It is estimated that South Africa currently produces about 12 000 qualified artisans a year, which is well short of government’s target of 30 000 a year by 2030.

Projections by the Africa Rail Industry Association suggest that additional parties using the rail network will create numerous upstream jobs by enabling industry (like smelters, steel mills, manufacturing and agri-processing) and mining (like new coal, manganese and iron ore mines) to become internationally competitive.

“When we invest in a train set to service a mine, for example, we will employ 40-50 people to run that service. That mine could employ 5 000 people. That’s the potential that open rail brings to our employment numbers and skills development efforts,” said Holley.

“One of South Africa’s biggest priorities is to develop qualified artisans to support our economy. To successfully deliver on our country’s Strategic Infrastructure Projects (Sips), we need artisans. To do this, we need government, business and our training sector to work together to create a pipeline of skilled people.”

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