Quarry Southern Africa January 2019 | Page 8

AFRICAN NEWS Recently appointed as the African Union special envoy for infrastructure development in the continent Raila Odinga has announced he intends to oversee construction of 60 000km highways linking the entire continent with modern highways and railways such as the Trans-African highway project commissioned in 1971 to open up the continent for trade. Should this come to fruition, it should have an enormous impact on the region’s quarries and asphalt suppliers. “Primary projects will be an says he accepted the AU role because he believes land transport is an integral part of the continent’s economic growth and that he intends to build another 4 700km road between Dakar and Lagos. He explains that out of nine highways proposed over four decades ago, only the 4 500km road between Dakar and N’Djamena in Chad had actually been constructed. “My belief is that having reliable road infrastructure and railways linking all corners of Africa will open 8 000km highway linking Cairo (Egypt) to Cape Town (South Africa) and another 8 0000km road will stretch from Cairo to Dakar in Senegal. A 6 000km road linking Mombasa in Kenya to Lagos in Nigeria, is part of this ambitious project,” says Raila Odinga. The Kenyan opposition leader indicated that linking Kenya to Nigeria via road will be one of his priorities as African Union’s high representative of infrastructure and development. Odinga Cape to Cairo finally to become a reality The end destination. up the continent and make it a gateway to the 21st century. Through my new position I am determined to take Africa to economic independence,” says Odinga.  Zimbabwe's mining sector is poised for better times with foreign investors reportedly showing strong interest since the new dispensation attained power, according to mines and mining development minister Winston Chitando. Chitando told delegates at Zimbabwe’s international trade fair, Mine Entra 2018, that the mining sector was primed for a massive injection of foreign capital, the absence of which over the years had constrained growth. While interest from foreign investors spanned across the entire range of over 40 minerals found in Zimbabwe, gold, which appears to have been hit the hardest by foreign investment drought, was positioned to benefit most. Chitando says he is expecting an investor which has expressed interest, to shortly invest USD50-million into the extraction of gold in the country. Mining is strategic to the Zimbabwe economy as it currently generates more than 60% of the country's annual exports and contributes 6_QUARRY SA| JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2019 between 12% and 16% of its GDP. “At the onset of the new dispensation together with President Mnangagwa we went to Davos (for World Economic Forum meetings) and in other subsequent meetings with investors the appetite for investing in Zimbabwe has never been this high. When the session was put together, the room ended up fitting only 27 people, but 45 had registered. So we will make sure that we are able to grow this industry,” he says. The anticipated capital inflow will feed into various domestic projects the government is planning, growing the mining sector to leverage the government’s Vision 2030 which is targeting middle income status by 2030 with per capita income for the country. Chitando says the government has lined up various mineral-specific support measures as it targets growing the mining sector from a USD3-billion sector to USD12-billion by 2023. This comes as major investments are anticipated in Good times beckon for Zim mining sector Zimbabwe Ruins, signs of early quarrying in Monomotapa. specific projects that include coal bed methane; USD4.2-billion Karo Resources; Tsingshan’s, world's top stainless steel producer’s USD1-billion stainless steel project; government’s USD400-million diamond production recapitalisation; and Great Dyke Investments' ongoing planned multi- million dollar investment into PGMs production in Darwendale. 