Mozambique opens new international airport

President of Mozambique Armando Emilio Guebuza speaks during the 68th session of the General Assembly at United Nations headquarters, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

President of Mozambique Armando Emilio Guebuza speaks during the 68th session of the General Assembly at United Nations headquarters, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Published Dec 15, 2014

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Sapa-AFP Maputo

MOZAMBIQUE’S President Armando Guebuza on Saturday inaugurated a new international airport in the northern port city of Nacala, which is shortly to be Brazilian mining giant Vale’s main hub for coal exports.

The estimated cost of $200 million (R2 billion) has been partly financed by a loan from the Brazilian state-bank, BNDES. Brazilian company Odebrecht was in charge of the construction.

The new facility will allow business travellers to avoid the 200km journey from Nampula, the closest airport.

Built on a former military airbase, the airport has an initial capacity of 500 000 passengers a year and can accommodate long-distance aircraft, according to Aeroportos de Mocambique.

Mozambique Airlines (LAM) has been using the airport since December 8, but the new facility has not yet received international certification.

LAM is still blacklisted in Europe, despite recent progress acknowledged this week by the European Commission in an official statement.

The airport opening marks a new stage in the development of resource-rich Mozambique’s north, with Nacala already boasting one of East Africa’s deepest natural ports.

“From a maritime perspective, this is the only port between Durban and Djibouti to have a draft greater than 15m,” Mathieu Freidberg, the Africa director for shipping company CMA-CGM, said.

A five-year rehabilitation of port infrastructure launched in March aims to increase container traffic five-fold, according to Loni Shott of Portos do Norte, the port operator.

Vale Mozambique is also about to complete a coal terminal and a 912km railway linking the Moatize mines in western Mozambique to Nacala.

After being repeatedly postponed, operations are expected to start in the second quarter of 2015, Vale Mozambique chief executive Pedro Gutemberg announced this week.

A $4.4bn investment, the Nacala logistic corridor – which encapsulates the port terminal and the railway line – is expected to handle 18 million tons of coal by 2017, increasing Vale’s export capacity fivefold.

When the railway was completed, Nacala would be connected to Malawi and to Zambia, Shott said.

Nacala would then become an important gateway to the Indian Ocean, with China and India major trading partners.

“Carriers are seeking alternates to Durban,” Freidberg said. “But… Nacala still lies far behind Mombasa in terms of infrastructure.”

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