The Civil Engineering Contractor February 2019 | Page 26

TECHNOLOGY From left: Paul Heslop, MD of Rhino Excavator Hammers, and Wiseman Mlobeli, operations manager of Rhino Earthmovers Plant Hire. strengthen good governance in procurement of infrastructure projects. However, there are serious unintended consequences that must be addressed with National Treasury, including project delays and cancellations, and conflict with construction general conditions of contract. This is becoming a serious issue that is threatening to hamstring government from releasing tenders to the benefit of industry and the delivery of infrastructure,” says Macozoma. He notes that the impasse with National Treasury had led to 50 of Sanral’s contracts not proceeding in the previous financial year, and that this would affect the construction industry with an 18-month lag in contracts awarded, as most of these delayed contracts are still in a design phase as a result. Things should return to normal after that, Macozoma hopes, “unless of course what the president was saying holds true: that the capacity in the country will have been reduced by then — the industry will not be able to absorb the projects and we’ll be looking outside. “On the positive side, there is a silver lining: despite low investor confidence, industry output is projected by analysts to rise at a compound annual rate of 1.5% over the medium term. Public investment 24 | CEC February 2019 "The production and turnaround times are also much quicker than concrete." in housing, energy, transport, and logistics are seen as drivers of this growth. Certainty over the National Development Plan’s five-year cycle of the national infrastructure plan is crucial if the industry is to gear up for a solid project pipeline. “Sanral has awarded two mega projects on the N2 Wild Coast at a cost of R3-billion, with a further seven packages soon to be tendered for a budgeted amount of an additional R6-billion. It is our hope that with the help of government and industry players, we can unlock the rest of the R128-billion worth of national road projects that are sitting at Sanral right now, not able to be rolled out because there’s a general anti-toll sentiment in the country.” Nonetheless, the current Sanral 2018/19 non-toll budget allocation amounts to R54-billion, plus another R15-billion for the toll portfolio that will go towards traditional maintenance and priorities capex. “We are the stimulus before the [Ramaphosa] stimulus package,” says Macozoma. Shaun Hadkinson, marketing manager of CoreSlab, CoreCivils, and Corestruc, describes the general state of the road building industry: “The entire construction industry is in a very difficult position. This can be attributed to underspending on infrastructure by the state, including roads — the bread and butter of the construction industry — due to a number of reasons. More recently, Sanral started spending again. This follows a protracted delay in investment into its roads infrastructure. According to the Ministry of Transport, Sanral’s spending is set to rise as high as R20-billion by 2020/21. “In the City of Johannesburg, only 6% of bridges are claimed to be in good condition and the balance requires urgent intervention. Some of these bridges are between 60 and 90 years old and an investment of R170-billion is required to attend to this growing backlog. The municipality wants to raise more than R50-million to attend to this shortfall,” says Hadkinson. According to Sanral, bridges on its road network are in good condition. The national road system comprises more than 9 800 bridges and major culverts, which are inspected every five to six years by accredited inspectors. This includes the 927 bridges and culverts on routes managed by concession holders. According to its 2017/18 financial results, 93% of travel on national roads involved bridges considered to be in good condition — slightly lower than in 2016/17, when the figure was 94%. “It notes that the majority of the national bridges and culverts were inspected from 2015 to 2017 and, wherever road upgrades include new bridges and culverts, inspectors ensure that these structures meet the specified flood-capacity standards,” he says. JG Afrika, a firm of consulting engineers, is supervising the doubling of an approximately 30km section of the N4 toll road between the M17 Garankuwa and R512 Brits www.civilsonline.co.za