‘Not one’ CSR locomotive made in South Africa, economic research group claims

14th June 2017

By: Terence Creamer

Creamer Media Editor

     

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Research commissioned by independent economic research institution Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies (TIPS) has found that, despite local-content obligations, not one of the China South Rail (CSR) locomotives being procured by Transnet has been assembled in South Africa and that all have been manufactured in China.

The research, conducted for TIPS by the Centre for Competition, Regulation and Economic Development, says the findings have been verified by scrutinising South Africa’s import bill for locomotives, which has grown significantly. “The imports were less than $50-million per year through 2013, but then climbed to $100-million in 2014 and $550-million in 2015,” TIPS reports in its latest ‘Real Economy Bulletin’.

It appears, the report states, that CSR has been given “exemptions” by Transnet on the number of locomotives that needed to be produced in South Africa, even though the procurement programme aimed explicitly to simulate local industry and industrial development.

In fact, when the R50-billion contract to procure 1 064 electric and diesel locomotives from four suppliers was announced in March 2014, the local content stipulations were held up as offering major industrialisation spin-offs.

CSR Zhuzhou Electric Locomotive and Bombardier Transportation South Africa, were contracted to collectively supply 599 electric locomotives, while General Electric South Africa Technologies and China North Rail (CNR) Rolling Stock South Africa would supply the 465 diesel locomotives. CSR and CNR subsequently merged, but the contracts continue to be treated separately by Transnet.

The CSR contract, valued at around R18-billion, was for 359 electric locomotives and was in addition to two earlier contracts placed by Transnet with CSR for 95 and 100 electric locomotives respectively.

Besides commercial, technical, black economic-empowerment, training and technology-transfer commitments, the successful original-equipment manufacturers (OEMs) also had to meet the Department of Trade and Industry's 55% local-content stipulation for the diesel locomotives and a 60% threshold for the electric locomotives.

Then Transnet CEO Brian Molefe even announced that some suppliers would deliver localisation spin-offs of above 65%, which would both stimulate the domestic railways reindustrialisation process and support the transformation of Transnet Engineering into an African rail OEM.

However, rumours soon emerged than not all the OEMs were honouring their local content commitments, a fact confirmed recently by Trade and Industry Minister Dr Rob Davies in a response to a Parliamentary question.

In an oral response in June, Davies raised concerns over the performance of the Chinese locomotive suppliers in meeting stated localisation commitments for the contracts.

He said a number of local suppliers had benefitted from technology-transfer and supplier-development programmes implemented by the OEMs, but indicated that the benefits had mainly arisen from the contracts with General Electric and Bombardier.

The TIPS research appears to confirm this stating: “The remaining suppliers to Transnet under this procurement process have lived up to their obligations; they have invested, developed suppliers and are exporting components to the region and globally. Transnet Engineering has also built its own capabilities to produce locomotives, which is a positive signal.”

By contrast, its research shows that CSR “undertook virtually no localisation of production”.

TIPS also argued that, in light of the fact that the State has few tools available to stimulate industrialisation, the localisation of procurement is one of the most important levers. “As a minimum, the remaining locomotives that Transnet will get in 2018 must be locally manufactured and the cost of each locomotive must be reviewed to ensure they do not incorporate corrupt payments.”

The issue of potential corrupt payments has been brought to the fore by the so-called #GuptaLeaks emails, which resulted in a report by amaBhungane and Scorpio alleging that a company owned by Salim Essa, who is said to have strong ties to the Guptas, is receiving R10-million from each R50-million locomotive that Transnet is buying from CSR.

“With the slowing economy, the effects of high-level corruption can now be explicitly felt. Where government policies designed to stimulate industrialisation have been captured, the result is not only corruption and money laundering, but also weaker foreign direct investment and slower industrialisation,” TIPS said in its bulletin.

“The State has few tools available to stimulate industrialisation, and the localisation of its procurement is one of its most important levers. Moral outrage aside, when corruption results in the importation of these items, it is a double blow to the economy – South Africa pays more for public investment and also loses the hoped-for stimulus to industry with the jobs and domestic manufacturing opportunities that would have been created.”

Separately, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) has laid criminal charges against those it claims to have been involved in illegally inflating the cost of the CSR contract, including Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba, and has indicated that it also plans to interdict the contract and have it overturned. The EFF alleges that the contract value for the ‘1064 locomotive’ contract was inflated by R17.4-billion.

Engineering News Online is awaiting responses to questions posed on the matter to Transnet, which has established a special committee to review the company’s procurement processes, with a specific focus on the locomotive acquisition programme.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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