24-hour operation considered for Beira Corridor border

Mozambique  and Zimbabwe have announced what could be another milestone in their  combined efforts to turn the Beira Corridor into a preferred route for  shipments in and out of the Copperbelt between Zambia and the Democratic  Republic of the Congo.

This after news agency New Ziana reported that the  governments of the two countries were looking into extending the  operating hours of the border crossing between Forbes (Zimbabwe) and  Machipanda (Mozambique).

This was confirmed by Fulgencia Seda, national migration service director of Mozambique.

Currently, the border posts open at 06:00 and close at 22:00, much to  the frustration of transporters using the R5 and N6 route between  Zimbabwe and Mozambique to the Port of Beira.

Should all go according to plan, the transit will follow the lead of  Chirundu further north on the corridor, where cross-border hauliers have  had the privilege of a 24-hour operation for several years now.

It is not clear though whether prospective efficiency enhancements  include turning Mozambique’s second-biggest border – its busiest  crossing (Ressano Garcia) is with South Africa down south – into a  one-stop border post, let alone a single-window system.

At this stage, it appears that all it entails will be a 24-hour border harmonisation agreement between Zimbabwe and Mozambique.

Should it come to pass, customs personnel at Forbes and Machipanda  will have to start working round-the-clock shifts from December 1.

Although it’s a no-brainer, establishing such labour dynamics across  the region isn’t always easy, as has been the case with the border  crossing at Kasumbelesa, the northernmost transit on the route into the  DRC’s Copperbelt province of Haut Katanga.

However, extended operating hours at Forbes-Machipanda at the very  least make every bit of sense as the Beira Corridor, from a sheer  distance point of view, trumps competing corridors.

At 1 595 kilometres, it places Beira significantly closer to the  DRC’s mining capital of Lubumbashi than its nearest rival, Tanzania’s  Port of Dar es Salaam, which is 2 080km away.

As for the Port of Durban, at 2 713km from Lubumbashi, security  issues on the N3 in South Africa and other holdups mean more and more  transporters are looking at using Beira.

And whereas Walvis Bay is perhaps the best bet for western cargo, Namibia’s primary port is still 2 472kms away from Lubumbashi.

But distance on its own is not the principal reason for operators servicing supply chain concerns in and out of the Copperbelt.

And Beira has yet to prove that it has significantly dealt with  nagging concerns such as capacity constraints and silting from the  Pungwe River.

Source: https://www.freightnews.co.za/article/24-hour-operation-considered-beira-corridor-border?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=daily-news-2022-08-03&utm_content=24-hour-operation-considered-for-beira-corridor-border

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