Jamaica Gleaner

TransJamai­can Highway, NROCC negotiatin­g terms for additional toll road

- Steven Jackson Senior Business Reporter steven.jackson@gleanerjm.com

TRANSJAMAI­CAN HIGHWAY, toll operator for the East-West corridor of Highway 2000, has moved forward plans to acquire more toll roadway currently under constructi­on in the parish of Manchester.

The road project is being undertaken by the Government of Jamaica through the National Road Operating & Constructi­ng Company Limited and is scheduled for completion in October 2022.

TransJamai­can Highway Limited, which is controlled by NROCC, wants to extends the toll road it manages to Williamsfi­eld in Manchester.

“The completion date is 2022, and early next year TransJamai­can will make a formal submission to NROCC,” said NROCC Managing Director Ivan Anderson at TransJamai­can’s annual general meeting on Tuesday.

The toll operator, whose toll network currently extends from Bushy Park, St Catherine, to Clarendon, was divested by the Government and listed on the stock market earlier this year. NROCC is the largest shareholde­r with 20 per cent interest.

TransJamai­can has a right of first refusal to own and operate the new leg of the highway.

“We have brought forward those negotiatio­ns and started looking at traffic along the corridor from May Pen to Williamsfi­eld, to understand the likely toll that can be charged and the likely volume of traffic and revenue on the roadway,”said Anderson.“We expect the traffic to be similar.”

TransJamai­can was divested after its acquisitio­n by t he Jamaican Government from French owners of the concession, Bouygues Travaux and partners. Expatriate Thierry Parizot remained as the head of the company through the transition, but NROCC is now in the process of recruiting a new managing director.

TRAFFIC DECLINE

“Yes, an ad was placed but no selection made to date,” said Anderson. “We are still reviewing the applicatio­ns submitted,” he said.

Traffic on the highway dipped 16.4 per cent between January and September due to the impact of the pandemic on travel. Usually, 1.9 million vehicles use the highway monthly, but that fell to a low of 940,000 during April due to lockdown measures and closure of the parish of St Catherine to contain the virus. Monthly traffic in July recovered to 1.7 million vehicles but dipped in August and September due to increased lockdown measures and the continued closure of schools, said Anderson.

The consequenc­es of the global health crisis have not abated since its emergence in Jamaica in March, and various restrictio­ns imposed by global government­s to contain the spread of COVID-19 are still weighing on travel, and, consequent­ly, on the level of traffic observed on most road networks across the globe, he said.

“This makes forecastin­g of traffic very difficult because it’s dependent on the restrictio­ns that are imposed by the Government of Jamaica,” he added.

As to the prospects for future traffic, the company continues discussion­s with a number of private and public sector developers along the highway corridor to facilitate access. TransJamai­can expects 14,000 new housing solutions within the Bernard Lodge area in St Catherine to come on stream in coming years, which would serve as a source of new commuters. The company also plans to set up a gas station in a zone along the Causeway Bridge in Portmore, St Catherine. This would augment the existing gas station at Old Harbour.

For the quarter ended September 2020, TransJamai­can earned revenue of US$11.2 million, down 16 per cent year on year. Over nine months, revenue fell 17 per cent to US$32.6 million. The company made a loss of US$2.7 million in the quarter, pushing its total losses over nine months to US$8.6 million. Up to this point last year, the company was running a profit of US$2.1 million.

 ?? FILE ?? Ivan Anderson, Managing Director of National Road Operating and Constructi­on Company.
FILE Ivan Anderson, Managing Director of National Road Operating and Constructi­on Company.
 ?? FILE ?? A section of Highway 2000.
FILE A section of Highway 2000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica