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SGR Progress thus far
Njunge
#1181 Posted : Wednesday, March 21, 2018 12:03:13 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/7/2007
Posts: 921
Swenani wrote:
[quote=murchr][quote=shadowinvestor]


You invest on an 1/8th or 1/4 acre plot and wake up one morning, a proud owner of a hole.Pray
Jump-steady
#1182 Posted : Wednesday, March 21, 2018 12:24:09 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 12/1/2008
Posts: 1,098
Njunge wrote:
Swenani wrote:
[quote=murchr][quote=shadowinvestor]


You invest on an 1/8th or 1/4 acre plot and wake up one morning, a proud owner of a hole.Pray


Laughing out loudly

But you 1/8th or 1/4 acre hole can expand to be a couple of acres and this time filled with watersmile
masukuma
#1183 Posted : Wednesday, March 21, 2018 12:27:31 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 10/4/2006
Posts: 13,821
Location: Nairobi
Kimende will be beachside property!! buy now!! buroti maguta maguta!
All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
Impunity
#1184 Posted : Wednesday, March 21, 2018 12:42:31 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/2/2009
Posts: 26,328
Location: Masada
shadowinvestor wrote:
Ouru needs to stop the extension of SGR to Naivasha till proper geological and seismic test have been carried out on the RV. After the exit through Ngong hills, the SGR goes through Suswa I think twice( cross those bridges twice on the Maimahiu Narok road) and its elevated. If the fault line hits again 300B drinks water namna hio. I am not sure if the British in the 19th century chose to use the escarpment and not the RV floor but we need to understand the risk first.


The lunatic line followed the escarpment right from Kijabe,Longonot,Suswa,Munyu and Naivasha...it didn't go deep into suswa area.
Portfolio: Sold
You know you've made it when you get a parking space for your yatcht.

Siringi
#1185 Posted : Wednesday, March 21, 2018 4:47:29 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/8/2013
Posts: 2,517
ION US-company-lobbies-Kenya-for-Sh300bn-road-contract
"😖😡KQ makes money for everyone except the shareholder 😏😏 " overheard in Wazua
FundamentAli
#1186 Posted : Thursday, March 22, 2018 5:23:01 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 11/4/2008
Posts: 1,289
Location: Nairobi
Impunity wrote:
shadowinvestor wrote:
Ouru needs to stop the extension of SGR to Naivasha till proper geological and seismic test have been carried out on the RV. After the exit through Ngong hills, the SGR goes through Suswa I think twice( cross those bridges twice on the Maimahiu Narok road) and its elevated. If the fault line hits again 300B drinks water namna hio. I am not sure if the British in the 19th century chose to use the escarpment and not the RV floor but we need to understand the risk first.


The lunatic line followed the escarpment right from Kijabe,Longonot,Suswa,Munyu and Naivasha...it didn't go deep into suswa area.

That is not true. The section between Kijabe and Naivasha was build in the later days. There was a pulley system between Kijabe and the floor of the Rift Valley close to the Satelite Station a few kilometres from Suswa. The old line was connected from that station to Naivasha.
Impunity
#1187 Posted : Thursday, March 22, 2018 5:47:31 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/2/2009
Posts: 26,328
Location: Masada
FundamentAli wrote:
Impunity wrote:
shadowinvestor wrote:
Ouru needs to stop the extension of SGR to Naivasha till proper geological and seismic test have been carried out on the RV. After the exit through Ngong hills, the SGR goes through Suswa I think twice( cross those bridges twice on the Maimahiu Narok road) and its elevated. If the fault line hits again 300B drinks water namna hio. I am not sure if the British in the 19th century chose to use the escarpment and not the RV floor but we need to understand the risk first.


The lunatic line followed the escarpment right from Kijabe,Longonot,Suswa,Munyu and Naivasha...it didn't go deep into suswa area.

That is not true. The section between Kijabe and Naivasha was build in the later days. There was a pulley system between Kijabe and the floor of the Rift Valley close to the Satelite Station a few kilometres from Suswa. The old line was connected from that station to Naivasha.


The pulley system was only during construction,in order to lower n move building materials to the head of the line.
No commercial train operated on the pulley system.
Portfolio: Sold
You know you've made it when you get a parking space for your yatcht.

Kusadikika
#1188 Posted : Thursday, March 22, 2018 8:58:21 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/22/2008
Posts: 2,703
masukuma wrote:
Kimende will be beachside property!! buy now!! buroti maguta maguta!


Only a few million years. Buy now before the price hits the roof!!!!
murchr
#1189 Posted : Friday, March 23, 2018 6:04:20 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
aemathenge
#1190 Posted : Saturday, March 24, 2018 10:51:31 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 10/18/2008
Posts: 3,434
Location: Kerugoya
Copy and Paste From The Economist

Quote:
Loans, trains and automobiles

Did Kenya get a loan to build a railway, or vice versa?

The Chinese-backed Nairobi-to-Mombasa line may never make money

Mar 22nd 2018| MOMBASA

WHEN Kenya launched its new railway last year, connecting the coastal city of Mombasa to the capital, Nairobi, passenger tickets sold out.

Travelling between the country’s two biggest cities overland had meant crowding into a bus for 12 hours, or riding the old British-built railway, which might have taken 24 hours.

The new line, run by Chinese engineers who wander up and down the carriages, has cut the journey to between four and six hours, depending on the number of stops.

The seats are comfortable and, at just 700 shillings (about $7), affordable. Lucky passengers see elephants along the way.

Shuttling passengers, however, is not what the new line was built for.

When Kenya borrowed $3.2bn from China for the railway in 2014, the aim was to move freight efficiently between the capital and the port at Mombasa, 484km (301 miles) apart.

Unlike the passenger service, the cargo one has been a disaster.

The second train out of Mombasa arrived a day late, because it didn’t have enough goods to leave the port.

Passengers may find the biggest elephant on their journey is the white one they are riding.

In theory, the line should move about 40% of the freight coming inland from Mombasa. The cargo is loaded straight from ships onto trains, which take it to a depot near Nairobi.

There it is processed by customs officials. The goal is to relieve congestion on the roads and lower transport costs.

One day, it is hoped, the railway will connect all of east Africa. For now, officials would settle for enough revenue to cover the running costs and repay the loans.

But getting importers to use it is proving harder than expected.

In its first month the line moved just 1,600 containers out of roughly 80,000 processed in Mombasa.

Though the trains go faster than lorries, the line is far less efficient at moving cargo, says William Ojonyo of Keynote Logistics, a Nairobi-based cargo-clearing firm.

There have been delays in loading trains. Customs processing at the inland depot is less reliable than in Mombasa.

“We are more comfortable dealing with the devil we know, the container on a truck,” he says.

Fees were cut after the first slow month, but traffic did not improve much.

On March 1st James Macharia, the transport secretary, sacked 14 out of 16 heads of department at the Kenyan Port Authority, alleging that “cartels” had been obstructing the new railway.

Cargo that is not directed to a specific clearing depot in Mombasa has been ordered onto the railway automatically, regardless of its final destination.

Importers have arrived in Mombasa to pick up containers, only to find that they have been sent to Nairobi.

Few in Mombasa are pleased by the idea of cargo being sent straight to the interior, bypassing the armies of agents based in the port city.

Hassan Joho, Mombasa’s governor, a fierce critic of the new railway, has stakes in two container-storage depots in the city (Mombasa?), which the railway could undermine.

By moving freight straight to Nairobi, “you’re killing the economy down here,” says Mr Joho’s spokesman.

A bigger issue than cartels in Mombasa ought to be economics.

Even if traffic increases, the line will probably not make enough money to repay its debts.

In 2013 the World Bank said that a new railway would be feasible only if it were able to move at least 20m tonnes of cargo a year, just about everything that goes through the port.

At best, the new line will transport half of that.

Some fear that it may not make enough to cover its running costs.

If the authorities then skimp on maintenance, the railway could deteriorate quickly.

Before the new line Kenya already had a functional railway—the old British one. In the 1980s it moved about 5m tonnes of cargo a year.

It could have been refurbished for perhaps a quarter of the cost of building a new one.

But that would not have come with a big Chinese loan or the cash that was splashed out on subcontracts and the land purchases needed for the new line.

Some cynics in Nairobi say that building the railway was a way to get a loan, rather than the other way round.


Source Link From The Economist


hardwood
#1191 Posted : Saturday, March 24, 2018 9:43:50 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
Many many yrs ago in Europe when the first railways were being built there was alot of opposition from horse owners who had dominated the transport industry. They argued that the new railway was expensive and would never make a profit. That what the cargo industry needed were stronger and faster horses not expensive railways. Also that the reli was inefficient coz the horse could move cargo from the harbour/docks to a customers doorstep which the reli couldn't do.
Fast forward. It's the reli that pushed Europe to the first world.

So what will our kids be saying 50yrs from now about our decision to build the SGR? Will they say we should have invested in "stronger horses"? What if our parents had built the sgr 30yrs ago .... now we would be talking about bullet trains between mbs and Nairobi like they have in Germany and japan.

FYI the sgr is being funded by the railway development levy charged on all imports. This means the sgr will be fully paid for even if it doesnt move even a single kg of cargo.

Also note that mzungu wants Africa to remain unspoilt/undeveloped so that when he tours Africa he finds an exotic place forgotten in time, the way the early explorers and colonists found it. That is why the lunatic express is so popular to mzungu. No wonder the prevalence of articles in the msungu media like The Economist rubishing the new reli.
hardwood
#1192 Posted : Saturday, March 24, 2018 10:13:07 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
KIFWA, the union for cargo agents and forwarders is on record as saying that they would rather die than use sgr.... even if it was free. That they would rather make sure the customer pays the usual 80k to move a container by road from mbs to nrb than use a free sgr. So this sgr cargo is just about vested interests and not economics. The agents in mbs and cfs want to keep their jobs and business and that's why they are trying to frustrate the sgr. The gov't should deal with this issue the way it dealt with the oil transport issue. The gov't built a pipeline and ordered that all oil be transported via the pipeline. The oil clearing agents had to move from mbs to nairobi, nakuru, eld, kisumu. The same should happen to all other cargo. Kenyans are tired of paying for destruction caused to the road by all those trucks on mbs road. Not to mention the terrible traffic jams and accidents caused by cargo trucks.
hardwood
#1193 Posted : Sunday, April 01, 2018 2:16:48 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
The future looks bright. Hope they pass the savings to customers. let those resisting the sgr continue resisting....and paying more.

https://www.businessdail...014-11y82jwz/index.html

SGR boost as top logistics firm loads train full of cargo

Quote:
Efforts to promote the use of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) got a boost Thursday when a fully loaded train ferrying goods belonging to a leading logistics firm left Mombasa for Nairobi amid calls for more importers to use the service.

Bollore Transport and Logistics ferried 108 Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit (TEUs) containers to the Inland Container Depot in Nairobi.

The firm’s managing director Jean-Pascal Naud, speaking during the loading of cargo said the train is efficient, cost effective and secure.

On Thursday Mr Naud claimed that by using the SGR, importers were saving about Sh40,000 on a round trip after the freight cost cut.
Julie
#1194 Posted : Sunday, April 01, 2018 7:34:52 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 12/2/2006
Posts: 658
Remind me what day it is
masukuma
#1195 Posted : Sunday, April 01, 2018 10:05:50 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 10/4/2006
Posts: 13,821
Location: Nairobi
I think it's important to build railways - regardless of whether it makes sense now. the truth is even the first railway in kenya was highly opposed... that's why it was named the lunatic express.
All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!
Siringi
#1196 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2018 6:22:05 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/8/2013
Posts: 2,517
My take if i was Ouru:

Fire people at the ministry of Transport and hire competent experts to specifically run with the SGR.
Lots of incompetence kwa mfano

Kenya Railways Board, Bandari KPA port

i will hire competent board of directors made up established industry mandarins wenye wana geneuine interest of this country no tenderpreneurs at the mercy of the minister.

Have in place interministerial task force reporting to me in person

Ni hayo tu.

Are there containers leaving Nairobi to Mombasa by road... ?
"😖😡KQ makes money for everyone except the shareholder 😏😏 " overheard in Wazua
Siringi
#1197 Posted : Thursday, April 19, 2018 6:11:38 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/8/2013
Posts: 2,517
Kenya-Railways-opts-for-conference-to-put-cargo-trains-on track

Classical case of Which comes first the egg or the hen. Engagement of stakeholder should have done way before the first sleeper was laid. “Anyways better never than late ...” was it Mulili ... incompetence shall be the bane of our country
"😖😡KQ makes money for everyone except the shareholder 😏😏 " overheard in Wazua
hardwood
#1198 Posted : Thursday, April 19, 2018 7:21:35 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
Siringi wrote:
Kenya-Railways-opts-for-conference-to-put-cargo-trains-on track

Classical case of Which comes first the egg or the hen. Engagement of stakeholder should have done way before the first sleeper was laid. “Anyways better never than late ...” was it Mulili ... incompetence shall be the bane of our country


Does gov't engage matatus before upgrading a road? What they do is that they study the road traffic system and come up with the solution to upgrade or expand the road.
They did the same for SGR after noting the transport chaos between mbs and nrb where passengers and cargo would sometimes be stuck for days in endless traffic jams not to mention numerous accidents and billions spent on road maintenance. The lunatic express line was no better with its endless delays and derailments.

Also I thought that for many yrs importers were complaining about the archaic lunatic express that was taking 4 days to move a container from mbs to nrb and saying that the solution was to have a modern SGR like in developed countries?
Mukiri
#1199 Posted : Thursday, April 19, 2018 10:50:58 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/11/2012
Posts: 5,222
Jump-steady wrote:
Njunge wrote:
Swenani wrote:
[quote=murchr][quote=shadowinvestor]


You invest on an 1/8th or 1/4 acre plot and wake up one morning, a proud owner of a hole.Pray


Laughing out loudly

But you 1/8th or 1/4 acre hole can expand to be a couple of acres and this time filled with watersmile

Laughing out loudly You can only lay claim if demarcated beacons are visible. Will they still hold in a hole?

Proverbs 19:21
Mkimwa
#1200 Posted : Tuesday, May 01, 2018 9:13:46 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 10/26/2008
Posts: 380
Cargo volumes on the SGR have been on a steady increase in the last few months.. last data reported was for week ending 18th April with 2917 TEUs transported via train.

31-Jan 438
07-Feb 671
21-Feb 1145
28-Feb 1168
07-Mar 1813
21-Mar 1943
29-Mar 2008
18-Apr 2917

This is data from KPA site SGR latest data.. Cargo evacuated via trucks has reduced as more importers turn to SGR..

The implications:
1. With shipping lines signing agreements with KPA/KR to have Nairobi as final destination on Bill of Lading, Importers who choose this option only have to think of last mile. I stand to be corrected, but i believe the cost of the SGR aspect will be included as part of shipping costs, and hence less headache for the importer. Hence importer pays shipping line or their agent and gets goods in ICD. Mombasa becomes transparent to importer, same way they really dont know if the goods were transhipped in Dubai or Singapore.

2. For those in trucking, ferrying containers from Mombasa to Nairobi is currently not a viable business, once all the inefficiencies on SGR are addressed. The writing is on the wall.. Adapt to last mile from ICD or Mombasa. I don't see why a Nairobi based importer would choose to transport goods via road once all the inefficiencies have been dealt with and the current SGR rates persist.

However, the SGR rates currently are designed to be very low to attract people to the SGR. Am sure once SGR get enough cargo, the importers and C&F agents will have systemized the SGR, and am 100% sure SGR rates will go back to the initial proposed rates of 50-60K per 40 foot container. Add last mile part, the cost will almost be same as that of a truck from MSA to NRB. This is the long term part, where the rail and truckers can co-exist, with the rail taking most of the traffic.

3. Expect most of the Mombasa C&F agents who deal with containers to shift their offices to Nairobi, and leave skeletal staff in Mombasa.

4. For most truckers, a shift towards transit cargo may be the way to go. This may bring down prices for transit cargo, e.g. Kampala rates may go down to 200K from 230-240K currently charged from MSA.

@essyk - how do you see things from the user point of view?
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