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East Africa considers Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway to facilitate moving goods across Lake Victoria

 

Kenya and Uganda are considering putting up new ports to carry cargo across the lake after Rwanda pulled out from the Kenyan standard gauge railway in favour of Tanzania’s Central Corridor.

According to Analysts, the pulling out from the Northern corridor could have just been the saving grace for the collapsed Lake Victoria transport system as the two countries indicate possibilities of putting up new ports.

Rwanda pulled out of the Kenyan SGR route in April 2016, after it realised that Uganda was not prioritising the Kampala-Kigali connection that would have seen it transport its goods through Kenya.

Kenya’s Transport Secretary James Macharia says, “The decision has not been reached but we have a number of options at our disposal. We can decide to end the SGR in Kisumu but it will still be a viable venture due to the presence of Lake Victoria.”

Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya now hope to exploit the lake to move goods, through their ports of Mwanza, Bukoba and Musoma in Tanzania; Port Bell in Uganda and Kisumu in Kenya.

Tanzania and Uganda have already said they will spend $30 million to improve their respective port infrastructure on Lake Victoria. Uganda is keen to develop its new Port Bell port in order to open up the southern route to Tanzania.

In case Uganda proceeds with its own SGR construction from Kampala to Port Bell, it will hope to utilise either the Mwanza or Musoma ports in Tanzania, to receive goods from either the Dar es Salaam or Tanga ports.

Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi will also be expected to exploit the Bukoba port to receive goods from either Tanzania or Kenya, if the two railway projects are built.

However the decision to explore the lake transport option may however, see South Sudan emerge as the biggest loser, if Kenya abandons the construction of the last phase of the Malaba-Kisumu route, which means that the planned Juba-Malaba connectivity will no longer be feasible.

Also the Kampala-Kigali, and the Kampala-Kinshasa connectivity via Malaba will no longer be feasible too should Kenya decide to terminate its railway project in Kisumu.

 

 

 

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