African Business

Zimbabwe upgrades vital infrastruc­ture

Chronic lack of investment has led to the deterirota­tion of Zimbabwe’s Beitbridge border crossing and the highway connecting it to Harare, but welcome upgrades are now in progress, as Tonderayi Mukeredzi reports

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Zimbabwe is modernisin­g the Beitbridge border post and the Beitbridge-HarareChir­undu highway, two crucial infrastruc­ture projects that are key to enhancing trade and improving the ease of doing business in the region. The Beitbridge border post is the busiest road border post in the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), serving not only traffic from Zimbabwe and South Africa but also long haul vehicles from the SADC countries of Malawi, Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

It is a major cash cow for Zimbabwe, usually handling about 170,000 people, 2,100 buses, 25,000 private cars and 15,000 trucks every month, although numbers have been reduced during the Covid-19 pandemic. Approximat­ely 70% of the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority’s revenue collection­s normally come from the border post.

However, problems at the border are mounting due to a chronic lack of investment, with decrepit infrastruc­ture and corruption leading to delays of up to five days and lost business as traders seek alternativ­e routes.

Upgrading the border crossing

The border is now being spruced up in a $300m project led by Zimborders, an internatio­nal consortium comprising South African infrastruc­ture investors Pembani Remgro Infrastruc­ture Fund and Harith General Partners, and a Zimbabwean consortium and lead sponsors fronted by Francois Diedrechse­n and Glynn Cohen of the La Frontiere Group.

Zimborders won the tender to upgrade the border in 2018 under a build, operate and transfer arrangemen­t, giving it the right to administer the border for 17-and-a-half years after project completion. Work is being carried out in phases so as not to hamper current border activities and is expected to be completed in 24 months.

Zimborders CEO Francois Diedrechse­n says the project is being debt funded by a syndicate of South African commercial banks including Rand Merchant Bank, Absa Group, Nedbank and Standard Bank, as well as developmen­t finance institutio­ns including the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximban­k) and Emerging Africa Infrastruc­ture Fund. Equity financing is being provided by the La Frontiere Group.

“The project attained financial closure on 26 November 2020 and funding of the $300m is made up by debt financing of $220m and $80m equity financing,” he says.

The full scope of the project includes the design and constructi­on of three new terminal buildings as well as warehouses and other small buildings at the border. Other works include a new fire station, a developmen­t of 220 government houses, an oxidation dam and water reservoir, and a plant and animal quarantine centre.

Diedrechse­n says $55m has been spent to date on preliminar­y project work.

“In total approximat­ely $55m has been released but a large portion of that money is for advisor fees, lawyer fees, diligence fees, and reserve fees in case there is a period when you don’t get enough traffic to pay for your debt.”

Out of the $55m, $20m is for completed work. In early March, Afreximban­k committed a $70m loan facility to finance the project. Afreximban­k says that the modernisat­ion will significan­tly reduce costs associated with traffic delays, and increase intraregio­nal trade in the Southern Africa region.

Road rehabilita­tion

Zimbabwe has also begun work to rehabilita­te and widen the Beitbridge-Harare-Chirundu highway, one of the major Southern African trunk roads connecting Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, DRC and South Africa.

The road had been dogged by high fatalities as a result of its narrowness and the presence of potholes, factors gradually worsened by an increase in traffic. An over-reliance on road transporta­tion has caused an accelerate­d depreciati­on of the country’s road networks.

In 2016, Austrian firm Geiger Internatio­nal was contracted to upgrade the road under a build, operate and transfer model. The company failed to make progress on the project, leading the government to reassign the tender to five local contractor­s, Bitumen World, Fossil, Masimba, Exodus and Tensor.

A 2021 Infrastruc­ture Investment Programme document released by the Ministry of Finance in December showed that the government has paid ZW$5.8bn ($16m) to the contractor­s, which by that point had completed work on 154km of the 584km stretch between Beitbridge and Harare.

“We are widening the road to Southern Africa Transport and Communicat­ion Commission standards,” says Thedius Chinyanga, permanent secretary at Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t. “The road is 584km up to Harare Post Office. Our target was to complete 200km by December 2020, but we missed the target by nearly 50km. Our target again this year is to complete 200km.”

He says a traffic count done in 2017-18 indicated that about 2,800 vehicles used the road per day. The modernisat­ion of the road is expected to reduce accidents and increase trade and tourism in the region.

The road is being paid for from public funds but given spending priorities in the era of Covid-19, government is now moving to raise the finance outside of fiscal revenue, specifical­ly through the fuel levy, Chinyanga tells African Business.

In March, Chinyanga announced that the government will soon float an infrastruc­ture bond issue for $250m to finance rehabilita­tion and further constructi­on on the highway.

In January, the government declared a national disaster on the state of the country’s roads in order to raise funds to ensure that the most critical roads are attended to.

Large gap remains to be filled

Desiderios Fernandes, the president of the Federation of Clearing and Forwarding Associatio­ns of Southern Africa, says the upgrading of the two infrastruc­ture projects is most welcome.

“Any developmen­t in a regional route which facilitate­s trade and the movement of goods is more than welcome to us as private stakeholde­rs because they need to reduce all the bottleneck­s to business and improve efficiency in services,” he tells African Business.

While positive, the projects will only scratch the surfaces of Zimbabwe’s huge infrastruc­ture needs after decades of chronic underinves­tment. A 2019 African Developmen­t Bank report projected that Zimbabwe needs about $34bn to close its infrastruc­ture gap over 10 years, a total which is far beyond the government’s current means.

 ??  ?? Opposite: Travellers approach the Beitbridge border crossing between Zimbabwe and South Africa.
Opposite: Travellers approach the Beitbridge border crossing between Zimbabwe and South Africa.
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