Stabroek News

Railway to nowhere shows Brazil's infrastruc­ture woes

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SALGUEIRO, Brazil, (Reuters) - The rusting tracks of Brazil's Transnorde­stina railway peter out and give way to a dirt trail in a remote corner of the country's arid northeast, far from the ports or farms it was meant to serve.

No trains run on these tracks and the cleared path for one of Brazil's most ambitious infrastruc­ture projects is used only by local cars, and the odd stray cow.

It was due to be delivered next month, but after 10 years of constructi­on and 6 billion reais ($1.76 billion) of mostly public investment, the 1,700-km project is only half complete.

As a new center-right government seeks billions of dollars in private investment for airports, roads and railways, the Transnorde­stina highlights the challenge of resolving Brazil's massive infrastruc­ture problems, especially now that the worst recession in decades has battered its ability to finance public works.

The railroad's future is in doubt as the new government is wary of sinking billions of reais more into a venture unlikely to offer a return on investment.

That reluctance could be the death knell for a generation of grand projects meant to drive developmen­t, including an eastwest railway in Bahia state and an oil refinery in Rio de Janeiro state that haemorrhag­ed public funds for years without ever being finished.

"This was meant to bring cheap fuel and jobs for the population," said farmer Francisco Emiliano, a 58-year-old father of seven, who lives beside the railway line here. "Everything has stopped. A lot of people are unemployed now."

Emiliano watches over his cattle from a small hut beside where ex-President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva launched constructi­on a decade ago, pledging the railroad would end the region's endemic poverty.

On Tuesday, the government pledged 430 million reais to restart work on the line. That money is unlikely to go far, but wins time for a Cabinet wrestling with whether to support or scrap a project in which public institutio­ns are so heavily invested.

The railway has always been politicall­y divisive. Left-leaning supporters have argued it can help develop a region ignored by private investors, while free market proponents say demand from businesses never warranted a railway of its size.

All, however, agree the execution so far has been flawed.

Amid accusation­s of poor design and financial mismanagem­ent, the government is considerin­g negotiatin­g the concession's return from its operator TLSA - controlled by Brazilian steelmaker Cia Siderurgic­a Nacional SA so it can be re-tendered, four sources said.

TLSA, in a statement, said building stopped due to delayed public payments. With fresh funds, the consortium said it could have 6,500 people working the line within six months.

Just 800 people are now working on the railway, down from 11,000 in 2010.

The Transnorde­stina was designed to carry commoditie­s like soy, corn, iron ore and gypsum from the remote northern state of Piaui north to the port of Pecem and east to the port of Suape, and from there be shipped to China, Brazil's main export market.

Its collapse would be a huge blow for these communitie­s, forcing businesses to continue using poor roads to transport goods.

For Renato Pavan, president of infrastruc­ture consultanc­y Macrologís­tica, it is a lesson in the perils of state-led developmen­t.

"The Transnorde­stina was thought along the lines of 'Let's build a railway and the economy will adapt,'" said Pavan. "But it doesn't work like that."

TRACKS STRANDED

Brazil's woeful infrastruc­ture costs the economy as much as 151 billion reais per year, according to consultanc­y group GO Associados.

This continent-sized country spends just 2.5 percent of its gross domestic product on infrastruc­ture. That, according to data from management consulting firm McKinsey, is less than a third of the proportion spent by China, half that of India and just under half of South Africa and Russia.

Along with a labyrinthi­ne bureaucrac­y and tax code, poor infrastruc­ture is one of the added expenses of doing business that investors collective­ly dub the "Brazil cost."

A lack of railways is particular­ly costly, forcing cargo to go by truck, which is slower and more expensive.

The Transnorde­stina began in 1999 as a modest plan to join existing branch lines but morphed into an ambitious 1,753 km-railway during the commodity-driven boom years of Lula's presidency.

To help develop the project, as much as 75 percent of its funding came from public sources, even though CSN led the consortium.

As the estimated cost rose from 7.5 billion to 11.2 billion reais and a deep recession ate into government revenue, public money dried up and work stalled.

The estimated 5 billion reais needed to conclude it has created an impasse between the government and the consortium.

While Brazil's federal audit court (TCU) insists costs over the initial 7.5 billion reais price tag are the responsibi­lity of the private companies, the consortium insists the government first pay its share.

Attempting to break the impasse, the Ministry for National Integratio­n on Tuesday offered up the fresh funds - far short of what's needed to complete the project - on the condition that TLSA present a working plan with targets for 2017 within 50 days.

TLSA said the new funds would create jobs for 5,000 people and that discussion­s were ongoing over a definitive plan to complete the project. Sat Dec 17, 2016 06:55 - 08:25 hrs Sun Dec 18, 2016 07:35 - 09:05 hrs The opening lasts for 1 1/2 hours

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 ?? (Reuters photo) ?? One of the rusting tracks
(Reuters photo) One of the rusting tracks
 ??  ?? Saturday Sunday Monday Dec 17, 2016 Dec 18, 2016 Dec 19, 2016 1-11/2 hrs 05:30 hrs 08:30 hrs 09:30 hrs 1/ 2 hrs
Saturday Sunday Monday Dec 17, 2016 Dec 18, 2016 Dec 19, 2016 1-11/2 hrs 05:30 hrs 08:30 hrs 09:30 hrs 1/ 2 hrs

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