The Herald (South Africa)

Graduates sail into new careers

Maritime futures beckon for Transnet trainees

- Shaun Gillham gillhams@timesmedia.co.za

IT IS plain sailing into a maritime career for 81 students who graduated from freight and logistics parastatal Transnet’s Maritime School of Excellence in Port Elizabeth yesterday.

The students, who were part of a record 513 Transnet graduates nationally, were treated to a swanky graduation ceremony hosted at the Boardwalk Internatio­nal Convention Centre yesterday.

Guest speaker and ceremony host was Transnet group chief executive Siyabonga Gama.

The graduates, who completed internatio­nally recognised qualificat­ions through the company’s specialise­d academy for marine and port operations, conducted their studies through the Port Elizabeth satellite campus of the Maritime School of Excellence – one of four Transnet schools of excellence.

Gama, who said this was the company’s highest number of graduates since 2013, said: “Now we no longer have to send people to Rotterdam [Netherland­s] for training.”

The graduates were trained for careers as marine pilots, tug masters, engineers and operators of lifting equipment like ship-to-shore or gantry cranes.

According to Gama, Transnet’s training programmes are aligned with the company’s 10-year infrastruc­ture investment programme which is valued at between R340-billion and R380-billion, its Market Demand Strategy and its customers’ business requiremen­ts.

Transnet has committed R7-billion towards skills developmen­t and training.

Since 2012, it has already ploughed some R60-million into training.

“We train more people than we require operationa­lly, so we are training for our economy and are contributi­ng towards national skills developmen­t and job creation,” Gama said.

Responding to questions during a tugboat display in the Port Elizabeth harbour prior to the graduation ceremony, Gama said on average Transnet retained and absorbed about 81% of its students after they had graduated through various company training programmes.

“We have found in the past that the Gulf countries in particular have attracted [Transnet-trained] employees.”

Gama also commented briefly on the often contentiou­s manganese operation at the harbour, which, while an important revenue stream for the parastatal, is one of two major operations in the port which are delaying the establishm­ent of a waterfront developmen­t there.

He said following a recent slump in commodity prices, which had had an effect on its manganese operations, the company was seeing an upswing in the ore operations – which it is expanding into a 16-million-ton terminal.

While Gama did not comment on the timing of the relocation of the manganese terminal to the Port of Ngqura, he said the first phase of that operation – which entails 1 050km of “heavy haul” rail developmen­t between Port Elizabeth and the Northern Cape where the manganese was mined, is near completion.

After the relocation, the existing facility would first be rehabilita­ted before being used to establish the biggest car terminal in the southern hemisphere.

 ?? Picture: FREDLIN ADRIAAN ?? AWASH WITH PRAISE: A tug joins in the celebratio­ns at Transnet’s Maritime School of Excellence graduation ceremony in Port Elizabeth yesterday
Picture: FREDLIN ADRIAAN AWASH WITH PRAISE: A tug joins in the celebratio­ns at Transnet’s Maritime School of Excellence graduation ceremony in Port Elizabeth yesterday
 ??  ?? SIYABONGA GAMA
SIYABONGA GAMA

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