All three regional rail
operators have agreed
to fund the Maputo
Corridor Logistics
Initiative (MCLI) in full for the
next year at least.
This is good news, in the long
term, for the development of
multimodal transport along the
corridor and the reduction of
costs and delays, according to
chief executive officer Barbara
Mommen.
Transnet Freight Rail, Swazi
Rail and the Mozambican
rail utility CFM have agreed
to cover the operating costs
of the corridor management
institution, which has been
largely funded by the private
sector for the past 12 years.
There is also some project
funding in the pipeline from
the World Bank’s Sub-Saharan
Africa Transport Program which
will see an MOU drafted to set
up a public private partnership
between the public sector in the
form of the three government
utilities and the MCLI as the
private sector.
“Authorities in all three
governments understand that
they have to speak to the private
sector in order to overcome
challenges on the corridor, and
vice versa, and at the moment we
are the private
sector,” she
says.
Mommen
says the
funding will
enable the
MCLI to
concentrate on
“predictability,
reliability and
efficiency.
“To achieve
this we will ensure that we do
not become a rail organisation.
We will continue to be an
inclusive corridor organisation,”
she says.
There is potential on the
corridor for developing
a multimodal transport
system which makes the
most productive use of the
investments by
both the private
sector in the
form of trucks
and trailers
and the rail
authorities.
“Road and
rail need to
work more
symbiotically.
This means
fresh thinking
by both rail and road operators.
“Now is the time for
multimodal transport if we
are to preserve the regional
infrastructure.
“The ministries of transport in
Mozambique, South Africa and
Swaziland are all very supportive
of this process,” she says.
Being part of a public private
partnership will give the MCLI
greater lobbying power in the
government sector.
“What it does is to bring both
the policy and implementation
arms of government into a
corridor institution. It is very
exciting to combine that with
private sector users, investors
and service providers,” she says.
Going forward she says the
focus will be on the provision of
“proper corridor services that
allow us to add value to all the
stakeholders.”
The provision of services
will also ensure the future
sustainability of the MCLI.
INSERT & CAPTION
Now is the time for
multimodal transport if we
are to preserve the regional
infrastructure.
– Barbara Mommen
Regional rail operators put weight behind MCLI
12 Oct 2016 - by Ed Richardson
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FTW Mozambique 2016

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