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Africa's Transport Infrastructure : Mainstreaming Maintenance and Management

ISBN: 9780821384565 | 0821384562
Format: Paperback
Publisher: World Bank
Pub. Date: 3/11/2011

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SummaryTable of Contents
This book presents and analyzes the results of a comprehensive collection of data on the extent and condition of transport infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa, identifies the reasons for poor performance, and estimates future financing needs.The transport facilities of Sub-Saharan Africa were built primarily for the colonial exploitation of mineral and agricultural resources. The chief goal of road and rail networks was to link mines, plantations, and other sites for the exploitation and transformation on natural resources to ports, rather than to provide general connectivity within the region. The road network of 1.75 million kilometers exhibits a low density with respect to population. Its average spatial density is very low by world standards. The network carries low average traffic levels. Even so, because most African countries have a low GDP, the fiscal burden of the network is the highest among world regions, maintenance is underfinanced, and road conditions are on average poor, while road accident rates are very high. Attempts to improve the financing of maintenance through #xE2;#xAC;Ssecond generation road funds#xE2;#xAC; have met with some success, but there remain serious weaknesses in implementation. Road freight transport is fragmented, but cartelized, with high rates and high profits.Railways were also built mainly as for the exportation of minerals and crops. With the exception of two or three very specialized bulk mineral lines, the traffic volumes are low, and the railways have been in financial decline since the 1960s. Concessioning of the lines to private operators has improved performance, but governments often impose unachievable requirements on the companies, and investment remains inadequate for long-term sustainability.Most of the 260 airports that provide year-round commercial service in Sub-Saharan Africa have adequate runway capacity, though some of the larger airports suffer from a shortage of terminal capacity. More than a quarter of the runways are in marginal or poor condition, and air traffic control and navigation facilities are below international standards. Though airport charges are high, few airports are truly financially sustainable. Three national carriers are quite successful, but most are small and barely sustainable. Protection persists in the domestic and intercontinental markets, but the international market in the region has been effectively liberalized. The safety record is poor.Most ports are small by international standards. Many are still publicly owned and suffer from inadequate equipment and poor productivity. Only a few highly specialized ports, including private ports integrated with the extraction companies, meet the highest international standards Costs and charges are high. But there is a trend toward concessioning of facilities to large groups specializing in international container terminals and port operations. Fortunately the shipping market is now deregulated.Urban transport suffers from some infrastructure deficiencies, particularly in the condition of urban roads. But the main problems of the sector are associated with the fragmented and poorly regulated nature of most urban bus markets. Finance for large buses is very difficult to obtain. In all modes the situation is made worse by failures of governance in both the provision and regulation of infrastructure. The overall deficit in financing for infrastructure is estimated using a model based on the application of hypothesized standards of connectivity for all modal networks and facilities. Once the amount of infrastructure needed to meet those standards was calculated, these #xE2;#xAC;Srequirements#xE2;#xAC; were compared with existing stocks and the costs of making the transition over a ten-year period were calculated. A #xE2;#xAC;Sbase#xE2;#xAC; scenario used standards similar to those pertaining in developed regions, while a #xE2;#xAC;Spragmatic#xE2;#xAC; scenario applied lower standards. In a separate exercise, the actual average expenditures on transport infrastructure from all sources were researched. This allowed the funding gap to be deduced by subtraction. The results showed that, excluding official development assistance, no country spent enough to meet the base standard, and that even with aid there remained substantial deficits in maintenance funding in many countries, with the worst situations found in the low-income, politically fragile group of countries.
... MORE
About the AICDp. xix
Series Forewordp. xxi
About the Authorsp. xxiii
Acknowledgmentsp. xxv
Abbreviationsp. xxix
The Legacy of Historyp. 1
Political History: Colonialism and Independencep. 1
A Consequence of History: A Distorted Transport Sectorp. 3
The Outcome: High Costs, Poor Service, and Reduced Tradep. 6
Country Diversity and Uneven Economic Performancep. 10
A New-Millennium Renaissancep. 14
Notesp. 15
Referencesp. 15
Roads: The Burden of Maintenancep. 17
The Road Networkp. 18
Road Infrastructure Performancep. 29
Institutions: Ongoing Reformsp. 37
Road Spending: A Problem of Executionp. 47
Freight Transport: Too Expensivep. 71
The Way Forwardp. 77
Notesp. 79
Referencesp. 80
Railways: Not Pulling Their Weightp. 83
Africa's Rail History: Opening Up the Continentp. 83
A Sparse and Disconnected Networkp. 85
Investment and Maintenancep. 89
The Marketp. 91
Freight Tariffs: Increasingly Competitivep. 101
Why Are Railways Uncompetitive?p. 104
Institutional Arrangementsp. 106
Operational Performancep. 115
Financial Performancep. 125
The Way Forwardp. 132
Notesp. 134
Referencesp. 137
Airports and Air Transport: Policies for Growthp. 139
Airport Infrastructurep. 139
Operationsp. 152
The Way Forwardp. 176
Notesp. 177
Referencesp. 179
Ports and Shipping: Moving toward Modern Management Structuresp. 181
Coping with Rapidly Changing Trade Patternsp. 181
The Institutional and Regulatory Frameworkp. 195
Infrastructure Developmentp. 206
Performance, Cost, and Qualityp. 212
The Way Forwardp. 219
Notesp. 222
Referencesp. 223
Urban Transport: Struggling with Growthp. 225
Infrastructure: Roadsp. 227
Infrastructure: Railsp. 231
Institutionsp. 232
Servicesp. 236
Faresp. 250
Financing and Subsidiesp. 256
Regulationp. 260
The Way Forwardp. 265
Notesp. 267
Referencesp. 269
Spending to Improve Connectivityp. 271
The Expenditure Model in Briefp. 272
A Detailed Look at the Model's Inputsp. 275
Applying the Modelp. 284
Outputs of the Modelp. 293
Insights from the Connectivity Analysisp. 306
Notesp. 308
Referencesp. 309
Financing: Filling the Gapsp. 311
Expendituresp. 312
What Can Be Done about the Shortfalls?p. 322
The Residual Funding Gapp. 347
The Way Forwardp. 350
Notesp. 352
Referencesp. 353
Governance: The Key to Progressp. 355
The Context of National Governancep. 356
Traditions and Attitudesp. 357
Institutionsp. 363
Capacityp. 371
The Way Forwardp. 375
Notesp. 377
Referencesp. 378
Conclusion: An Agenda for Actionp. 381
Critical Transport Policy Issuesp. 382
Improving Governancep. 394
Expenditure Requirementsp. 400
Notesp. 405
Referencesp. 405
Introductionp. 407
AICD background Documents Relevant to the Transport Sectorp. 407
Country Typology for Study Countriesp. 409
Referencep. 409
Roadsp. 411
Road Data Sources and Analysisp. 411
Basic Country Data for the Set of 40 Countriesp. 416
Classified Road Network Length for 40 Countriesp. 418
Road Network Densities for 40 Countriesp. 420
Road Network Length by Surface Class and Network Type for 40 Countriesp. 422
Average Annual Daily Traffic by Road Type for 40 Countriesp. 424
Distribution of Networks by Traffic Level for 40 Countriesp. 425
Vehicle Utilization of Roads by Surface Class and by Passenger and Freight for 40 Countriesp. 427
Classified Road Network Condition by Network Type for 40 Countriesp. 428
Road Accident Rates for Countries in Africap. 430
Road Maintenance Initiative Institutional Indicators, September 2007p. 434
Selected Standards by Network Type, Surface Class, and Traffic Level for 40 Countriesp. 437
Preservation Requirements for Securing the Custom Standard over a 20-Year Period for 40 Countriesp. 439
Preservation Requirements for Securing the Optimal Standard over a 20-Year Period for 40 Countriesp. 443
Custom Standard 20-Year Preservation Needs by Work Type for 40 Countriesp. 443
Optimal Standard 20-Year Preservation Needs by Work Type for 40 Countriesp. 445
Referencesp. 447
Rail Transportp. 449
Rail Networks in Africap. 450
Production Structure of African Railways, Average 1995-2005p. 452
Rail Passenger Trafficp. 454
Pricing and Institutionsp. 456
Factor Productivityp. 458
Railway Namesp. 460
Referencep. 461
Airports and Air Transportp. 463
Data Sources for Air Transport Analysisp. 463
Airportsp. 466
City Pairs Servedp. 467
Installation of Ground-Based Navigational Aids in Africap. 469
Total Capacity Suppliedp. 470
Costs of Airport Construction versus Rehabilitationp. 472
Domestic Air Transport Markets in Africa, 2007p. 473
Market Concentration, 2007p. 474
Trends in Aircraft Agep. 475
Trends in Aircraft Sizep. 477
Safety Assessments, 2007p. 480
Ports and Shippingp. 483
Annual Trafficp. 484
Institutional Characteristicsp. 486
Infrastructure Facilitiesp. 488
Cargo-Hand ling Performance Indicatorsp. 491
Port Access and Landside Qualityp. 493
Average Port Costs and Chargesp. 496
Expenditure Needsp. 499
Costs of Achieving Targets of Pragmatic Scenario, by Expenditure Purposep. 499
Financingp. 501
Transport Spending and Finance Sources, by Countryp. 502
Potential Efficiency Gainsp. 504
Agency and Total Social Benefits of Timely Road Maintenancep. 506
Closing the Gapp. 513
Notep. 515
Indexp. 517
Boxes
The Economic Costs of Political Fragmentation: The Case of Guineap. 5
Road Concessions in Africap. 50
Air Afriquep. 156
Inland Waterways: A Neglected Assetp. 186
The Nigeria Port Concessionsp. 203
Introducing Dedicated Infrastructure for Bus Transitp. 235
Financing Large vs. Small Buses in Nairobip. 258
Mixing Scenariosp. 299
The Kenyan Government's Purchase of Luxury Vehicles for Official Usep. 358
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.


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