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S Africa’s Transnet ramps up deliveries to Richards Bay

  • Market: Coal
  • 16/08/24

South Africa's Transnet Freight Rail (TFR) has increased the number of trains delivering coal to the Port of Richards Bay, thereby moving tonnage from road to rail.

An annual maintenance shutdown of the coal export line lifted 28km of speed restrictions and unlocked two additional train slots on the section running from Ermelo to RBCT, the firm said. Each slot can handle two trains a day, so this enabled an increase to 28 scheduled trains a day from 24 previously.

In the first six months of the calendar year, more locomotives and operational improvements on the line that serves the multi-purpose and Grinrod coal export terminals resulted in an increase to 28 trains a week from 21 previously. By 30 September, this will be ramped up to 32 trains a week, which will equate to a further 1,035 truckloads off the road, TFR said.

TFR and Eswatini Rail have also started coal deliveries via the Golela railway line to Richards Bay. Golela is a border town straddling the KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa and Eswatini.

Rail shipments of coal to RBCT dropped sharply between 23 July and 1 August because of the maintenance shutdown. An equipment failure and minor delays in fully reopening the North Corridor after maintenance was completed on 1 August because of theft further impacted deliveries.

But despite these logistical challenges, TFR was able to restore coal shipments to RBCT for 5-11 August. As a result, deliveries in the week ending 11 August rose more than fourfold to 924,600t, up from the previous week's railings of 223,600t.

During the annual coal line maintenance shutdown, exporters generally ramp up road volumes to keep supply chains operational and meet firm vessel commitments. "This is one of the key reasons why truck congestion became significant again in the Richards Bay Port precinct towards the weekend of 9 August," TFR said.

As the rail service returns to normal after the shutdown and ramp-up initiatives take effect, road transport levels are expected to normalise to pre-shutdown levels, the firm said.

TFR further said it was exploring various "last mile" strategies to optimise port logistics. "These strategies will aim to further reduce congestion in the port precinct, while allowing those exporters who have an appetite to road haul to continue doing so at a faster turnaround time," it said.


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