Featured Project: Le Meridien

Ghana

Description
Construction of a Le Meridian, Marriott Hotel at Airport Residential Area, Accra, Ghana. The development is a 18 000m², 8 storey hotel property, comprising 160-keys including standard rooms and suites, an all-day dining restaurant, a separate speciality restaurant, lobby lounge and associated bar, conferencing facilities, fitness centre and spa with an outdoor hotel pool and pool bar provision. The GPS co-ordinates are 5.5992335, -0.1758426

 

Status Region
Underway Ghana
Category Value
Building Unknown At This Stage
Industry Timing
Hospitality & Leisure 2019 to 2022
Sector Class
Private Invited / Negotiated


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Tlhabane Square – Mall

North West

Description
Construction of a two level, 31 000m² mall for Tlhabane Square Precinct in Tlhabane, North West. The precinct is located along the Swartruggens Road (R104) and bordered by Monareng Street and Motsatsi Street. Direct on-grade open parking will be available throughout the precinct. Estimate Value: R700 Million. The GPS co-ordinates are -25.645411549782242, 27.209999514927187

 

Status Region
Underway North West
Category Value
Building R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Retail October 2019 to March 2021 extended to October 2021
Sector Class
Public Private Partnership Open Tender / Possible Pre-Qualification


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Autumn Leaf Mall – Infrastructure

North West

Description
Construction of services and associated infrastructure including access road, civil services (water, sewer, stormwater reticulation and electricity) for the proposed Autumn Leaf Mall and filling station including a convenience store situated on Portion 24 (a Portion of Portion 5) of the farm Hazia 240 JP, near Zeerust town situated in the Ramotshere Moiloa Local Municipality, North West Province.

 

Status Region
Awarded Zeerust
Category Value
Infrastructure R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Retail 2019 onwards.
Sector Class
Private Invited / Negotiated

 


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Boulevard Triomphal Precinct – Residential

Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

Description
Construction of a residential zone at the Boulevard Triomphal Precinct located on the Boulevard Triomphal, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. The precinct will include commercial office buildings, a hotel, residential spaces, a retail high street, restaurants, coffee shops, a conference facility and a grandstand to allow for a possible event arena. The street level is designed to enhance the informal trading market on the edge of the site and create activation along the surrounding roads.

 

Status Region
Conceptual Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
Category Value
Building R 31 Million – R 60 Million
Industry Timing
Residential 2020 onwards
Sector Class
Private Invited / Negotiated

 


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

10 Interesting Facts on Central Africa

posted in: Did You Know 0

Central Africa, most of these regions are riddled by danger.

All because of little stones found deep beneath the Earth and other minerals too, but the dangers are mainly due to a girl’s best friend: Diamonds!

Of course, it is nothing like the war-zone found in Sierra Leone, but it is still red flag zones nonetheless. Big companies have tried for years to mine in these regions on industrial scales but have largely failed. The mining areas here are largely controlled by rebel and armed groups, for the purposes of formality, we will refer to these extremists as artisanal miners.

The point of this blog is for a much lighter note, and not the sordid realities of the mining industry in the Central African regions, but a brief scenario of those conditions was worthy of mention. I was just as surprised and shocked to learn about these two, here are the top 10 interesting facts about the mining industry in Central Africa.

PRENDRE PLAISIR!

 

10. Cameroon
Until mid-2008, Cameroon had no history of industrial mining.

9. Congo
46% of the world’s diamond production occurs in Africa, led by Bostwana and The Congo. The Congo contributing 34% of Africa’s production. That is a lot of Sparkle for Congo, I hope she never stops shining.

8. Gabon
There are NO restrictions on foreign ownership in Africa. However ONLY the Gabon government requires investors to meet the Central African Economic and Monetary Community investment regulations. I personally support this clause, 100%.

7. Gabon
The Comilog Mine is the second-largest producer of manganese alloys in the world. Why is Africa still importing stainless steel then?

6. DRC
In 2009, African Business magazine estimated the total untapped mineral wealth of the DRC to be US$24 Trillion – equivalent to the GDP product of Europe and the United States COMBINED at the time.

5. Equatorial Guinea
Signed their FIRST EVER, mining contracts in the country’s history in June 2020. So not all of 2020 has been doom and gloom. An entire five mining contracts were signed with three different companies. The contracts are for Gold, Bauxite, Uranium and Iron.

4. Cameroon
Cameroon makes it again on my list. Explorers and industry professionals say though Cameroon has vast mineral resources, it is not yet extensively mined. Why so shy? What are you hiding underneath all that soil Cameroon?!

3. Chad
Although there are several national and international mining companies exploring the potential for gold and uranium mining in Chad, no large-scale mines are operating in the country. Most mining activity is conducted by artisanal miners.

2. Gabon
Making it for the third time on my list. In the 70s uranium was mined in Gabon to supply the French nuclear power industry. This was the time frame that the Oklo reactor zone was discovered.

1. Angola
Diamonds in Angola are responsible for over 98% of the government’s earnings. Talk about top Dollar.

 

Sources:
KPMG
Mining in Africa
Mining Technology


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I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Barclays ABSA Head Office, Ghana

 

Description
Construction of the Barclays ABSA head office in Ghana. The development has 5 floors plus the ground floor.

 

Status Region
Tender Ghana
Category Value
Building R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Office & Commercial September 2020.
Sector Class
Private Invited / Negotiated

 


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I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Kaptis Hydropower Plant

Kenya

Description
Construction of the 14.7MW Kaptis Hydropower Plant in Western Region, Kenya.

 

Status Region
Procedural Kenya
Category Value
Infrastructure R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Power Grid, Industrial 2020 onwards
Sector Class
Private Open Tender / Pre-Qualification / Invited


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I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Rusizi 4 Hydropower Dam

Rusizi 4 Hydropower Dam

Description
Construction of the 230MW Rusizi 4 Hydropower dam for Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The project will cost US$700 million.

 

Status Region
Procedural Central Africa
Category Value
Infrastructure R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Infrastructure Completion due in 2024.
Sector Class
 Public Private Partnership Open Tender / Possible Pre-Qualification


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

Featured Project: Mountain View iCity, Cairo – Creek Park

Mountain View iCity, Cairo – Creek Park

Description
Construction of residential units in Creek Park, one of six distinct parks that make up an integrated urban community, mixed-use development containing 18 000 housing units built on an area of 500 acres in New Cairo City, worth $3.6 billion. Creek Park has their own architectural style, landscaping and lifestyle personality. The units are designed like villas, but sized like apartments ranging from 100 to 500m², each with its own entrance, green space and parking.

 

Status Region
Underway Egypt
Category Value
Building R 100 million+
Industry Timing
Residential 2017 onwards.
Sector Class
Public Private Partnership Invited / Negotiated


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About Minnie Zondi

I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

How Funding affects Construction in Africa

posted in: General 0

Construction is a vital sector of any country’s economy because the physical construction of the developments become the backbone of the nation’s economy that enables goods and services to be distributed within and outside the country.

Furthermore, the functionality of the designs and construction of the developments have an impact on the productivity with which other business activities can be undertaken. Thus it can be said that the infrastructure of a country influences the competitiveness of enterprises and the country’s abilities to attract foreign investment, which is important in an era of globalisation as nations compete to attract foreign domestic investment.

However, with the general economic weaknesses Africa faces as a developing continent it means that we do not enjoy the realities of the above utopia.

Construction in Africa is predominantly funded through the following four Funding mechanisms

Government Funding
The Government is spending the “peoples money” to fund the project.

Private Funding
A project which is funded by a private developer which can be a private individual or company.

Loans
Financial assistance provided by an international bank or international financial institution to the government which is repayable after some time with interest. e.g.   a loan from the African Development Bank or a generous loan from generous ‘ China ’

Public-Private Partnerships
A contract between a government institution and a private company, in which the private company bears significant risk and management responsibility, and payment is linked to performance.

Regional Construction Focus

East Africa

With 166 underway projects on our website: East Africa accounts for 23.4% of projects on the continent.

Southern Africa

With 1229 underway projects on our website. The region accounts for 30.7% of all projects in Africa.

Central Africa

With 14 underway projects on our website. The region continues to be negatively affected by lower commodity prices, as all countries in the region are resource dependent. In total Central Africa is home to a few major public projects worth about US$9.8bn.

West Africa

With 66 underway projects on our website. The region accounts for 26.1% of all projects in Africa.

North Africa

With 50 underway projects on our website. The region accounts for 13.2% of all trackable projects on the continent.

Just taking into account the 1 525 projects that are marked as underway on our website out of the 6 412 captured,(with a cidb grading value 8-9. In stages between Conceptual – Underway) we can deduct that Africa requires an unprecedented magnitude of funds that individual countries do not have or just cannot afford to fully invest in. Furthering the dependency of international loans that we receive from the likes of China. This then minimizes the opportunities for local companies to make a sizeable splash in the construction pond.

The lack of funding or rather the ability for African nations to allocate more of their financial resources into construction has also cultivated a culture of non-payment of accounts. The amounts due to construction companies and a failure to make payment in time, lead to horrible liquidation or business rescue of established first-tier companies that boost the sector.

Furthermore due to the general economic weakness in the continent and a high need for infrastructure development means that we see more contracts that are uneconomical if work was to be given to local contracting professionals.

We further see delays in the completion of contracts within the scheduled times, if ever because of a lack of funds: which adversely affect the chances of any African nation attracting good and healthy direct foreign investment to boost the overall economy of the country. Furthermore, it affects local construction professionals because it becomes hard for them to afford to take the work.

Africa’s construction industry deficit is a cause of great distress. The problem of internal funding shortage and the large size of the infrastructure needs, require a lot of funding options. That we have! However, it would be great if we had ones that lessen the over-dependence on international loans because this allows excessive exposure and vulnerability of the continent and its resources.

Responsible lending and borrowing behaviour are required on the part of Africa and its development partners to avoid unsustainable external debt levels which are detrimental to Africa’s construction industry growth.

No matter what cause I pick for my topic, the prevalent effect seems to mimic a viscous airtime advance system cycle: You borrow airtime. Load airtime to pay back the service provider. Clear your debt. Be left with nothing. Then you have to borrow airtime again to survive and in the end, you have not looked after your own interests. In my opinion, the health and growth of the local construction scene by our own labour should be of main interest for the decision makers when funding the sector is concerned.

Concluding I have to admit, I would fail to propose a well developed, practically applicable solution model to the effects I have presented above. However as much as there are a whole lot of challenges surrounding construction operations in Africa, there is potential for growth. If we would just find suitable and positive investment strategies that will work for a developing continent, without harming the wealth of business knowledge, skills and labour we already have, in years to come the industry could be so well developed it would practically fund itself.

 

Sources:
George Ofori, Ph.D., D.Sc., Funding Construction Industry Development
Deloitte, Africa Construction Trend Reports
BDO South Africa, Saving the Construction Sector
African Business, Boosting development through sovereign wealth funds
Wikipedia

 


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I am an insanely optimistic ambivert that does everything from the heart instead of the mind. Deeply interested in people and matters that pertain to mankind.

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