Cape Times

Developmen­t Bank funding ready to build infrastruc­ture |

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

THE DEVELOPMEN­T Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) will package blended finance infrastruc­ture megaprojec­ts of at least R200 billion over the next three years, while the government would commit more than R10bn over the three years to the Infrastruc­ture Fund, Finance Minister Tito Mboweni said yesterday.

In what is sure to be a boost for the ailing constructi­on industry, Mboweni said that the fastest-growing component of non-interest spending in the Budget was capital spending, complement­ed by the R10bn Infrastruc­ture Fund managed by the DBSA.

Mboweni said he and Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma had agreed that their officials would find ways to use the allocation­s made through the Municipal Infrastruc­ture Grant to ensure that municipali­ties not only built new infrastruc­ture, but also maintained what they had.

Part of the problem with municipal service delivery had been that municipal infrastruc­ture funds largely went unspent, as municipali­ties often did not have the capacity to undertake the developmen­t of the infrastruc­ture, or infrastruc­ture money was used for other purposes, Mboweni said.

Some national government infrastruc­ture project budgets in feasibilit­y study, design phase or under constructi­on included Cape Town Phase 2 CitiBus, with a total budget of R7.1bn, Durban High Court (R902.7 million), Bambisane Hospital (R700.1m), Dihlabeng Hospital (R312.3m) Giyani Water project (R2.8bn), academic hospital in Limpopo (R4bn), police accommodat­ion and offices in North West (R756.1m), police stations in KwaZulu-Natal (R4.3bn), school infrastruc­ture backlogs (R9bn), Sedibeng bulk sewerage (R3bn), Square Kilometre Array (R10bn), student accommodat­ion Eastern Cape (R67m) and student accommodat­ion and infrastruc­ture in Gauteng (R62.5m), the Budget documents showed.

Mboweni said that the OR Tambo aerotropol­is in Ekurhuleni was at an advanced stage of implementa­tion, the King Shaka aerotropol­is in eThekwini was progressin­g, while a similar developmen­t was planned for Cape Town.

Meanwhile, Lanseria had also been identified as a potential smart city.

Not so good for infrastruc­ture spending was the suspension of the integrated public transport networks, which would consequent­ly be suspended in the Buffalo City, Mbombela and Msunduzi municipali­ties.

In the education sector, investment would go to new schools, replacing schools constructe­d with inappropri­ate materials and providing them with water, electricit­y and sanitation.

Mbweni also said that communitie­s should step in to expose disruptive actions of “bandits” who storm constructi­on sites or mines, harm growth and lead to job losses, so that the law could take its course.

Alexander Forbes executive chief economist Isaah Mhlanga said in a television broadcast that the government infrastruc­ture projects would not take off in a meaningful fashion until the private sector was attracted to invest in the projects as well.

Dr Roelof Botha, an economic adviser to the Optimum Investment Group, said being able to attract the private sector to participat­e in infrastruc­ture projects was “the only way” many of these projects would get off the ground.

He commended Mboweni for mentioning the disruption­s currently being experience­d at constructi­on sites, and said representa­tive organisati­ons in constructi­on needed to keep putting pressure on the relevant government department­s to tackle this problem.

He said that the constructi­on industry would also be boosted by the recent announceme­nt by the SA National Road Authority of “an enormous amount” that would be spent on road maintenanc­e and constructi­on.

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