The Dar es Salaam Port has launched the
One Stop Centre (OSC) designed to cut down port dwelling and
documentation time from the current nine to five days.
The OSC, the first of its kind in the
country and bringing 11 government agencies under one roof, seeks to
integrate clearing and forwarding of various goods at the port—the
gateway for East and Central Africa.
The Minister for Investment and
Empowerment, Dr Mary Nagu says although the centre operates manually,
it’s the greatest milestone on easing bidding constraints on doing
business in the country.
Dar es Salaam port handles about 95 per
cent of the Tanzania international trade, serving six neighbouring
landlocked countries in the Southern African Development Community and
East Africa Community blocs.
“Effective operationalisation of the one
stop centrewill greatly improve Tanzania’s score in the Trading Across
Borders Index,” Dr Nagu, an economist, said, noting that the OCS is
currently a manual single window operation opted to rescue the situation
as an immediate and temporary solution towards reaching the electronic
operation.
The minister said the Dar es Salaam port
OSC has paved the way for the opening of similar centres at all ports
in the country and key border posts to facilitate trade within the
region.
The Tanzania Port Authority (TPA) Director General, Ephraim
Mgawe, said the OSC is currently hosted in a temporary building but will
shiftto its permanent 35-storey building under construction adjacent to
TRA’s long room.
“The contractor is already at the site,”
Mr Mgawe said, adding that the 100bn/- project to constructthe tallest
building is expected to take three years.
The centre, according to the
US Agency for International Development (USAID) Tanzania Mission
Director Robert Cunnane, would cut short the travel time for clearing
and forwarding agents to zero from current estimated 14 kilometres used
to complete one clearance.
“...the layout of the One Stop
Centre...will allow Dar es Salam to become truly modern port...we (US)
believe that Tanzania has bright future as a leading exporter in East
Africa,” Mr Cunnane said.
USAID partnered with TPA on designing the
centre and it contributed 50,000 US dollars for the information
technology system, through its USAID/COMPETES—the Competitiveness and
Trade Expansion Programme.
Chairman of the Container Freight
Station ICDs Dry port Association of Tanzania (CIDAT), Mr Ashraf
Khan,said OSC would improve supply chain at the port by increasing
efficiency at clearing process.
He told the ‘Daily News’ that CIDAT had
proposed the formation of the centre during their Dar Port Improving
Committee as way of reducing congestion.
He said even the dwell time reduction to
nine days from 17 days of 2009 was the results of the Inland Container
Deport (ICD) to support the port cargo movements.“It is possible to
reduce the dwelling time to hours,” Mr Khan, also a General Manager of
Azam Inland Container Depot.
Source: The Daily News,http://www.dailynews.co.tz, reported by Abduel Elinaza
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