Mmegi

NataMaun road revamp gets P580m boost

- MBONGENI MGUNI Staff Writer

Government intends to spend P580 million over the next two financial years on rebuilding the 300-kilometre road, the dilapidate­d but critical link that has been the focus of transport infrastruc­ture grievances over the years.

According to an appendix to the draft Transition­al National Developmen­t Plan, government intends to spend P260 million rebuilding the road in 2023-24 and another P320 million in the 2024-25 financial year.

The transition­al NDP, which has been tabled before Members of Parliament for debate, is meant to ensure that the next NDP starts at the same time as the tenure of the next political administra­tion, after the 2024 elections.

The Nata-Maun road is part of P8.5 billion proposed to be spent on road infrastruc­ture projects in the next two financial years under the transition­al NDP.

“The programme aims to improve the national road infrastruc­ture,” reads a note accompanyi­ng the proposals on the broader road infrastruc­ture budget.

“It will cover the constructi­on, reconstruc­tion and expansion of the road network, thereby providing alternativ­e routes, connecting production areas with market centres and facilitati­ng movement of goods locally and internatio­nally. This will stimulate economic activity and value chain developmen­t,” further says the report. According to the transition­al NDP, the projects will be delivered through the use of new constructi­on methods and technologi­es such as In-Situ Cold Recycling and New Gravel Stabilisat­ion. Both methods are relatively new and involve the use of materials already available on the older road.

The latest developmen­ts around the Nata-Maun road follow the breakdown in 2020 of negotiatio­ns between government and China for a loan that would have covered the rebuilding of the road.

As reported previously by Mmegi, the two sides deadlocked over the terms of the agreement, particular­ly the choice of main contractor for the project. Negotiatio­ns had run from June 2020 and collapsed without agreement later in the year,.

China had provided a P3.4 million grant in May 2019 to fund the road’s feasibilit­y study, in anticipati­on of negotiatio­ns towards the loan. Botswana had secured a pledge of P10.2 billion in concession­al loans from China after government’s participat­ion at the Forum for China Africa Cooperatio­n in September 2018. The Chinese government had also written off P80 million in existing debt owed by Botswana.

The concession­al loans were expected to be used in roads, rail and other critical infrastruc­ture.

“When we could not agree on the terms, we noted that the project was urgent and we could not go back and forth with the Chinese on the terms,” Finance Ministry permanent secretary, Wilfred Mandlebe told a parliament­ary committee previously.

“The decision was that we use our own resources and we are going to come to Parliament with a supplement­ary budget to fund that. The Chinese funding was one of the possible sources of funding, but it was taking long,” he added.

Meanwhile, the transition­al NDP is also proposing P1.8 billion for reconstruc­tion of the Francistow­n to Nata road over the next two financial years.

The entire Francistow­n-Nata-Maun route is a major economic corridor to the tourism heartland and the economic hub of Ngami district.

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