Clean Drinking Water
Tender Summary:
POM175.pdf
See details below or the tender documentation
Tender Closed on: 2021-02-16 11:00
Tender Documents
Transport News
FRONTdoor Collective Hires Industry Veteran Chris Patteson as CTO & CISO
As tech architect for this unique e-commerce delivery network, Patteson will build their vision for best-in-class innovation and flexibility in the last mile.
Banyan Technology Expands Leadership Team
Supports Aggressive Product Development Strategy, Commitment to Service
Traffic to switch to contraflow on N3 between Cato Ridge and Dardanelles
Traffic between Camperdown and Dardanelles on the N3 will switch to contraflow on the evening of March 9, a few days earlier than expected, the South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) says. “Contraflow is a temporary arrangement where traffic on a road is transferred from its usual side to share the other half of the carriageway with traffic moving in the opposite direction,” explains Sanral Eastern Region project manager Mohamed Parak.
Ramaphosa says Budget aimed at growth and employment
Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana presented a budget that supports and reinforces the programme of action announced in the State of the Nation Address (SoNA) to grow the economy and create jobs, says President Cyril Ramaphosa in a February 28 newsletter. The budget provides details on how government plans to raise money and where it is going to spend that money to improve the lives of South Africans.
City of Joburg launches probe into R94m spent on 13km road which is in ‘complete disarray’
The City of Johannesburg has launched a probe into R94-million which was spent on the Braamfischerville Ext 12 Gravel Roads Upgrade project. The City said the current state of the road was in "complete disarray".
Transnet bottlenecks to hamper South Africa’s export opportunities amid Russia sanctions
The bottlenecks in South Africa’s export corridors – caused in large part by State-owned logistics company Transnet’s inability to provide sufficient capacity – will likely undermine any opportunities that could arise from commodity supply shortages and higher prices as more sanctions are implemented against Russia, financial services provider Sanlam Investments equity analyst and fund manager Andrew Snowdowne told Engineering News on March 4. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24, sanctions have now been imposed on Russia by the European Union, the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and Japan, while certification of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project has been suspended by Germany.
Large-megawatt hydrogen fuel cells eyed by shipping industry in move away from fossil fuels
Decarbonising the shipping industry requires collaboration and investment in developing new fuel types and propulsion technologies, with hydrogen fuel poised to play an important role in the energy transition of this sector, reports the World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC). Establishing safe technologies that the industry has confidence in is a vital part of achieving a move away from fossil fuels, it states.
Grindrod, Vitol to invest R1.8bn in expanding Maputo’s Matola Terminal
Freight services and banking group Grindrod will spend its share of R1.8-billion to upgrade the Matola drybulk terminal at the Port of Maputo. The JSE-listed Gindrod holds a 65% share in the Matola Terminal joint venture (JV), with energy and commodities group Vitol the other shareholder.
South African airlines welcome re-establishment of country’s essential air services councils
The announcement that the South African government had appointed new air services councils was welcomed by the local commercial aviation sector on Thursday. There were two such councils, the International Air Services Council and the (domestic) Air Services Licensing Council. These councils were responsible for considering applications for, and awarding (or withdrawing) the licenses to operate which were required by South African airlines and other commercial aviation services operators. The previous councils had ceased to exist in April last year, when the terms of office of their councillors had expired.
Load-shedding, vandalism wreak havoc with train services in Cape Town
Train commuters in Cape Town had to keep their fingers crossed during load-shedding on Wednesday as Metrorail worked to keep systems up and running. On Tuesday, services had to be cancelled because of vandalism at the Tafelbaai high voltage substation, on top of load-shedding.