The Civil Engineering Contractor July 2019 | Page 36

BUSINESS INTEL SANRAL: Here for the long haul Sanral produces only top quality roads. By Ntsako Khosa South African National Roads Agency Limited (SANRAL) has been in existence for two decades. In a follow-up to last month’s interview, CEO Skhumbuzo Macozoma takes us through the second part of that journey and looks to the organisation’s future. M acozoma says that SANRAL works differently to the other road authorities in the country, for instance prioritising engineering principles like road maintenance over new infrastructure. “Whenever we get our budget allocation, the first thing we spend on is maintenance and this is what every roads authority should do. Politically there’ll always be pressure to develop new infrastructure, however, and for good reason because certain parts of our country desperately need it,” he says. He agrees that a balance is required between the two and that is one of the things that Horizon 2030 addresses. Four pillars underpin the business model: road infrastructure, mobility, road safety and stakeholder engagement. Rather than being reactive to challenges it faces, SANRAL has decided to be proactive 34 | CEC July 2019 in dealing with issues that have plagued the current decade, hence road safety and stakeholder engagement form part of the core pillars. “Engineers have to learn to better engage with public when they plan and develop infrastructure. Without that, it’s been proven many times that your projects will suffer delays or there will be public rejection, project cancellations, and so on, says Macozoma. We’ve established a dedicated unit across the regions, and are finalising our stakeholder engagement procurement process to be able to appoint partners that will help with social facilitation prior to projects arriving. The aim is to engage with communities, prepare them for project arrival, and set up necessary processes so that the project is better accepted and supported when you implement it.” With more than 400 projects that need to be delivered, an effective transformation policy that includes supply chain management reforms and human resource capacity enhancements is being rolled out. This is seen through various Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) signed with yellow plant manufacturers such as Barloworld, Bell Equipment and Wirtgen Group. A section of their policy states that SANRAL needs to be deliberate in transforming sub-sectors they operate under. “Part of the problem with our industry is that you’ve got players that own the entire supply chain,” says Macozoma. “And a lot of the time, black businesses that want to play find it difficult to participate and they find themselves at the mercy of big players in terms of getting access.” MoUs were set up to address yellow plant access to SMMEs as well as training on how to use the machinery. Under the MoUs, small business are provided with access to plant equipment, finance as well as onsite training. “Our projects are out in the bundu. We therefore get big players to provide technical support at sites. If plant breaks down, sometimes it’s difficult for small players to move plant to get it fixed and back on site www.civilsonline.co.za