The Citizen (Gauteng)

Train flaw needs an inquiry, Cyril

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What is it with the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) and its apparent inability to take accurate measuremen­ts? Because of that, it ends up buying trains which are the wrong size. We reported this week that the doors of the new, highly touted commuter trains the corporatio­n has signed up to buy – for R51 billion – are too low for the current station platforms. This will necessitat­e the expenditur­e of further billions in correcting the flaw.

There are echoes of a previous Prasa stroke of genius a few years ago, when the corporatio­n bought a batch of diesel locomotive­s which were found to be too tall to use on the current rail network: they would have been unable to pass under some bridges and would have damaged overhead electricit­y cable infrastruc­ture.

The latest deal – which includes a serious supposed sweetener for the country in that many of the train sets will be made here – has raised barely an eyebrow.

But how bizarre is it that you, as a rail operator, do not ask your supplier – right at the beginning of negotiatio­ns – whether the rolling stock can be made to fit your system? Doing it in this way flies in the face of sensible business practice, because it is the procuremen­t tail wagging the dog.

Prasa is to spend R172 billion (at today’s prices, never mind what that amount might balloon to in the future) over the next 10 years on improving its infrastruc­ture. Although there will be a major makeover of facilities at stations and signalling equipment too, a significan­t chunk of that money will go towards fixing up the platforms.

Surely this is more wasteful expenditur­e by a stateowned enterprise?

Seeing as we are already in “commission of inquiry” mode – perhaps here’s another one, President Ramaphosa.

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