The Civil Engineering Contractor June 2018 | Page 7
ON PROJECT OWNERS’ DESKS
some improvements in sentiment among the other three
provinces, this was overshadowed by the outcome in the
Western Cape.”
Dar es Salaam bus terminal
Project: Transport terminal
Client: Dar es Salaam City Council
Location: Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Conclusion
The Dar es Salaam City Council has set aside funds during
the financial year 2017/18 and it intends to apply part of
the proceeds of this to payments under the contract for
construction of the proposed Dar es Salaam City Regional
Bus Terminal at Mbezi Luisi. The City Council intends to pre-
qualify building contractors for this project.
The first quarter of 2018 was yet another period where
strain in both the building and civil engineering sectors
was highlighted. The outcome in confidence levels in both
sectors was below 40 index points, which was broadly in
line with the poor levels of the underlying indicators. They
persisted below their long-term averages. Discouragingly,
future activity momentum is likely to remain under
pressure in both sectors. This is partly reflected in the
indicator rating insufficient demand for building and
construction work as a constraint, which remains elevated
in both cases.
The latest GDP growth statistics from Stats SA showed
a fourth-consecutive decline in output in the construction
sector. Output fell by 1.4% quarter-on-quarter (SAAR)
in 2017 Q4. Discouragingly, this quarter’s survey results
suggest that the pressure in both building and civil
construction activity could persist. The outlook for activity
in both sectors is further clouded by the recent government
budget for 2018, which reiterated the reduction in
expenditure away from capital and towards consumption
expenditure. Indeed, about 47% (or R39.7-billion) of
the R85-billion in spending reductions consists of cuts to
conditional infrastructure grants to provincial and local
government.
The Dar es Salaam City Council intends to build a bus terminal
at Mbezi Luisi. (Image is illustrative.)
Rehabilitation of Akosombo outfall drain
Project: Infrastructure, building
Client: Volta River Authority
Location: Ghana
About the survey
Volta River Authority (VRA) of the Republic of Ghana
intends to apply part of its budgetary allocation to fund
eligible payments under the contract for the rehabilitation of
the Akosombo outfall drain. The works comprise the supply
and placement of boulders, earthworks, concrete works,
pipework, and other associated ancillary works. The VRA
invites sealed tenders from eligible contractors who have
registered with the Ministry of Works and Housing, have a
minimum financial classification certificate of K2, and can
demonstrate experience in having executed similar projects.
The total estimated period for the completion of the project
is 10 calendar months.
Enquiries:
Rami Moorosi, project manager: Marketing
T: +27 (0) 12 482 7244
E: [email protected]
Website: www.cidb.org.za
The cidb SME Business Conditions Survey is
conducted quarterly among Grades 3–8 cidb-
registered contractors (categorised into
Grades 3 & 4, Grades 5 & 6, and Grades 7 &
8), both for general building and civil industries.
The main indicator used for analysis purposes
is business confidence, which indicates whether
respondents find the current business conditions
satisfactory. A business confidence index can
vary between zero (indicating an extreme lack
of confidence) and 100 (indicating extreme
confidence). The 50 index point mark is interpreted
as neutral.
The fieldwork for the 2018 Q1 survey was
conducted during the period 29 January to
6 March 2018.
The works comprise the supply and placement of boulders,
earthworks, concrete works, pipework, and other associated
ancillary works.
CEC June 2018 - 5