New appointments to help ship repair focus

3rd August 2018

New appointments to  help ship repair focus

PRESTON KHOMO The strategic development of ship repair infrastructure is being brought to the fore

Transnet National Ports Authority (TNPA) has announced its new appointments and rotational changes to current harbour masters, all effective July 1, 2018.

Preston Khomo, previously Richards Bay port manager, has been appointed as ship repair executive manager to manage and administer the organisation’s ship repair resources nationally.

Khomo joined TNPA in 2004 as the port operations and consulting infrastructure development head of the then international arm of Transnet – Portcon – and also served as real estate senior manager with a portfolio that included the management of the Island View Precinct and ship repair for the Port of Durban. In 2012, he was appointed as Richards Bay port manager.

In his new role, he will be responsible for the strategic development of ship repair infrastructure, creating mechanisms for fair and equitable access to infrastructure as well as the provision of adequate and efficient services. Ship repair facilities are located at the ports of Durban, East London and Cape Town, where there are dry docks, and at Port Elizabeth and Mossel Bay where there are slipways.

Ship repair has been under the spotlight since 2014 when government announced its Operation Phakisa strategy to unlock the potential of the oceans economy. Numerous infrastructure upgrades have been rolled out by TNPA at its facilities, which are in various stages of completion. Khomo will manage the implementation of the current capital programmes in all ship repair facilities.

In the short term, the focus will be on developing a comprehensive ship repair strategy and tactical plans, and on improving the functionality and efficiency of TNPA’s ship repair business. Khomo will be responsible for market trends and planning capacity to meet demand, as well as ensuring TNPA realises optimal value from its ship repair commercial property portfolio, while meeting its obligations in terms of the National Ports Act.

Thamsanqa Sithole has been appointed as the new manager for Richards Bay port.

Sithole joins TNPA from the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa, where he was senior manager, enterprise programme management officer and financial analyst for the past seven years.

Sithole holds an MBA from the Midrand Graduate Institute, a Postgraduate Diploma in Business Management from Thames University, London, and a Diploma in Monitoring and Evaluation of Health Programmes, from the University of Pretoria Continuing Education. He recently completed a Project Management Professional Diploma from PM IDEEAS.

Sithole worked with TNPA in the past as programme manager in the infrastructure and engineering department at the Port of Durban from 2007 to 2011, where he was involved with the delivery of multidisciplinary infrastructure projects in line with State-owned freight utility Transnet’s capital infrastructure plan. These include the infrastructure, planning and development strategy for the Island View Precinct, as well as representing TNPA on national strategic projects such as the New Multi Product Pipeline project.

TNPA has also implemented several inter-port transfers within its complement of harbour masters.

The role of harbour master at the Port of Cape Town is now being filled by Captain Alex Miya, former harbour master at the Port of Durban. Captain Sabelo Mdlalose has transferred from the Richards Bay port to succeed Miya at the Port of Durban. Captain Mdlalose has been succeeded by Captain Precious Dube, who transferred from the Port of East London to Richards Bay port, and the Port of East London’s harbour master role has been filled by the ports marine operations manager Mzukisi Nqwata.

Other harbour masters remain as is: Captain Quenton Brink in Saldanha, Captain Vania Cloete in Mossel Bay, Captain Brynn Adamson in Port Elizabeth and Captain Thulani Dubeko at the Port of Ngqura.

The changes will allow ongoing development of TNPA’s harbour masters through their exposure to other ports within the ports authorities’ network of complementary ports. The transfers will also enable TNPA to fill the vacancy in the role of harbour master at the Port of Cape Town following the promotion of Captain Vernal Jones from Cape Town harbour master to port manager at the Port of Saldanha last year.