AfDB puts up nearly $700m for Burundi-Tanzania SGR link

The project complements ongoing construction of 400 kilometres of rail infrastructure being built in Tanzania from Dar es Salaam to Dodoma since the start of the first phase of the project. The rest of the section from Dodoma to Tabora is under construction.
In Summary

The African Development Bank (AfDB) Group is providing financing of $696.41 million to start Phase II […]

The African Development Bank (AfDB) Group is providing financing of $696.41 million to start Phase II of the Joint Tanzania-Burundi-Democratic Republic of Congo Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) Project.

Burundi will receive $98.62 million in the form of grants while $597.79 million will go to Tanzania in the form of loans and guarantees. As the Initial Mandate Lead Arranger (IMLA), AfDB Group will structure and mobilize financing of up to $3.2 billion from commercial banks, Development Financial Institutions (DFIs), Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) and institutional investors. The total cost of the project both in Tanzania and Burundi is estimated at nearly $3.93 billion.

The construction of this railway will allow Burundi to intensify the exploitation of nickel, of which the country has the 10th largest deposit in the world in the Musongati mining fields.

Burundi also has resources such as lithium and cobalt, which are expected to generate significant revenue for the country through the rail link with the port of Dar es Salaam which currently accounts for 80 pc of the country’s import and export trade. This will add value to the national GDP and allow Burundi to have additional resources to accelerate its social and economic development.

Access to an efficient cost-effective long-haul bulk transport service through the SGR will incentivize large-scale mining and commercial agriculture. It will transform the Central Transport Corridor to an economic corridor by enhancing trade and manufacturing opportunities along the corridor influence zone, and provide for a shift from road trucking transportation, which causes accidents and high road maintenance cost.

The SGR railway network will unlock and connect key economic processing zones, industrial parks, Inland Container Depot (ICDs), and population centers along the central corridor. This will enhance accessibility and promote economic activities. This project will contribute to building resilience by supporting the creation and development of institutions that will manage the new railway sector in Burundi and supporting capacity building through skills training in both countries.

The project complements ongoing construction of 400 kilometres of rail infrastructure being built in Tanzania from Dar es Salaam to Dodoma since the start of the first phase of the project. The rest of the section from Dodoma to Tabora is under construction.

AfDB financing is to be spent on constructing 651 kilometers on the Tanzania-Burundi railway line. The work will consist of the development of a single electrified standard gauge track.

This will be subdivided into three lots: Tabora – Kigoma (411 km) and Uvinza – Malagarasi (156 km) sections in Tanzania; and the Malagarasi –Musongati section (84 km) in Burundi. This standard gauge railway project will be connected to the existing railway network of Tanzania, providing access to the port of Dar es Salaam.

This project is a priority for not only the East African Community (EAC) Rail Master Plan, but the African Union’s Program for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) and will facilitate economic and social transformation in both countries and in the region.

 

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