Swaziland’s King Mswati
III has announced plans
to dig a 70-km canal from the
Mozambican coastline to give the
Mountain Kingdom its own port.
Initial estimates put the cost at
US$3 billion for a four-berth port
on a 26-hectare site.
Gideon Dlamini, minister of
commerce, industry and trade, is
quoted by the government-owned
Swazi Observer newspaper as
saying that the project is definitely
on the cards.
It will compete against Durban
and Maputo.
“The problem with the Maputo
and Durban ports is their
shallowness. These two ports are
not deep enough to handle heavy
ships and we have received reports
that there are ships that face
difficulty docking in these ports
because they are not deep enough,”
he is quoted as saying.
There has been no comment
from the Mozambican authorities.
However, the official Agencia
de Informacao de Mocambique
(Mozambican news agency)
commented that “as anyone
who has driven from Maputo to
Swaziland can testify, the land
rises steeply.
“Canals are fine for transporting
goods over flat terrain – but if
there are hills in the way, locks
must be built, dramatically
increasing the costs.
“Building a canal with a system
of locks capable of holding oceangoing
vessels would be a massive
engineering undertaking”.
Swaziland will face challenges
raising the necessary finance.
Jiro Honda, leader of an
International Monetary Fund
(IMF) team which visited
Swaziland in September, said the
recent weakening of the regional
economic outlook would have
adverse impacts on Swaziland
through trade and financial
channels.
Swaziland wants to connect through Mozambique
21 Oct 2015 - by Ed Richardson
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Mozambique 2015

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