Daily Maverick

Transnet’s private sector partnershi­p plan is on track

The SOE details how it plans to embrace the private sector as a partner for delivery and fixing its rail network, but private sector players are concerned about high tariffs. By

- By Ray Mahlaka Ray Mahlaka Ray Mahlaka is a Business Maverick associate editor.

Transnet has started the process of partnering with private sector companies that are set to use the stateowned transport group’s vast rail network across South Africa to operate trains independen­tly over the next three to five years.

If all goes according to plan, Transnet is set to open up its rail network to the private sector as early as April this year – a process that will unleash billions of rands from companies in upgrading the country’s transport infrastruc­ture.

In recent days, Transnet released a document called a draft network statement, which details how the state-owned entity (SOE) plans to embrace the private sector as a partner for delivery in its rail network that spans 21,200km across the country. The statement will be gazetted in a few days for public consultati­on and comments before being finalised at the start of Transnet’s next financial year, which begins on 1 April. Transnet plans to get trains operated by private sector players in the second half of the year, said the company’s new group CEO, Michelle Phillips.

Transnet’s partnershi­p with private sector players was first mooted more than 10 years ago, but was revived in recent years by President Cyril Ramaphosa as part of a range of reforms to grow the economy. The difference now is that reforms at Transnet are urgent and the SOE needs the private sector, considerin­g that it has a smothering debt load of R130-billion, which doesn’t give it room to fix and upgrade its rail network on its own.

The logistics industry believes that Transnet has neglected the maintenanc­e of its rail network over the past decade, and has estimated the maintenanc­e backlog to be at R200-billion. By partnering with Transnet, private sector players will have to carry this cost, while also putting in place security measures to curb incidents of vandalism and theft of cables – which the SOE’S draft network statement unveiled reached crisis levels last year – on its rail network.

The dysfunctio­nal rail system is throwing South

Africa’s economy deeper into the doldrums. Stellenbos­ch University’s Dr Zane Simpson estimated that Transnet’s inability to rail sufficient volumes of commoditie­s (mainly coal and iron ore) to ports cost the economy R411-billion in 2022 and about R353-billion in 2023. This translates to a cost of about R1-billion a day in lost economic output.

How opening up rail will work

Transnet’s draft network statement takes forward the process of liberalisi­ng rail in South Africa, which has long been controlled by Transnet. The SOE sets the terms and conditions for how its customers and industry use and pay for its infrastruc­ture to rail their goods to markets.

To liberalise rail, Transnet plans to sell rail slots on its network to third parties or private sector players, allowing them to introduce their electric locomotive­s, independen­tly rail their goods to markets, and move traffic off-road and on to rail. This process will be managed by a newly establishe­d infrastruc­ture manager office that has set general rules, deadlines, procedures and contractua­l arrangemen­ts for private sector players accessing Transnet’s rail infrastruc­ture.

Some industry players see the publicatio­n of Transnet’s draft network statement as a positive move. James Holley, CEO of Traxtion, Africa’s largest private rail operator, described it as a “watershed moment and [the] government must be praised for taking another step in the right direction for rail reform in South Africa”.

“While we celebrate this progressiv­e move, we are examining the draft statement to ensure that the conditions align with the implementa­tion of rail reform as laid out in the National Rail Policy, adopted by Cabinet in 2022, the Freight Logistics Roadmap and the Private Sector Participat­ion Framework, adopted by Cabinet in 2023,” said Holley.

Traxtion emerged as a successful bidder in November 2022 during Transnet’s initial process to auction rail slots in the Cape Corridor. However, Transnet cancelled the contract awarded to Traxtion, saying negotiatio­ns with the company to work out the mechanisms for its participat­ion in the railway lines proved challengin­g.

The private sector largely snubbed Transnet’s initial process to auction rail slots for several reasons.

First, Transnet required that private sector players work with a two-year period for capital investment­s, which involves deploying electric locomotive­s on the rail routes. Such an initiative requires a capital investment period of at least five to 10 years, considerin­g that locomotive­s cost about $4-million to acquire and take about 24 months to bring into South Africa.

Second, Transnet set a two-year lease or contract period for using the rail slots. Private sector players wanted a period of more than two years, considerin­g that they would be making large investment­s and purchasing equipment that could last for at least 30 years.

Transnet has now corrected this by offering rail slots for between three and five years. Daily Maverick understand­s that Traxtion is keen to participat­e in Transnet’s new auction process.

Concerns about high charges

A point of contention among private sector players is the tariffs they will pay to Transnet and the infrastruc­ture manager once they are allowed to run trains. Some players believe that the tariffs cited in Transnet’s draft network statement are too high.

In the long term, some private sector players believe that the government should consider cutting its operationa­l railways in half – from 21,200km to between 10,000km and 12,000km. Holley said the reduction will allow Transnet to be focused on fixing a much smaller rail network and “doing more with less”.

The Freight Logistics Roadmap supports Holley’s view, as it talks about right-sizing and closing “low-density” iron ore and coal railway lines.

 ?? ?? Transnet’s CEO says the SOE plans to get trains operated by private sector players in the second half of the year.
Photo: Dean Hutton/bloomberg via Getty Images
Transnet’s CEO says the SOE plans to get trains operated by private sector players in the second half of the year. Photo: Dean Hutton/bloomberg via Getty Images
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