Transport in Botswana

Transportation in Botswana is provided by an extensive network of railways, highways, ferry services and air routes that criss-cross the country.[1] The transport sector in Botswana played an important role in economic growth following its independence in 1966. The country discovered natural resources which allowed it to finance the development of infrastructure, and policy ensured that the transport sector grew at an affordable pace commensurate with demands for services.[2]

Flag of Botswana

Rail transport

Rail services are provided by Botswana Railways, with most routes radiating from Gaborone. Botswana has the 93rd longest railway network in the world at 888 km, it is one of the busiest railways in Africa. The track gauge is 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) (cape gauge). Botswana is an associate member of the International Union of Railways (UIC).

The new chairs of BR Express

Regional trains (BR Express)

Botswana Railways run 2 nightly passenger trains, one from Lobatse to Francistown, and the other from Francistown to Lobatse, with stops in Gaborone, Mahalapye, Palapye, and Serule. The passenger train is termed the "BR Express" (Botswana Railways). Passenger services were suspended from 2009 to 2016, with the exception of an international link to Zimbabwe from Francistown.

Commuter/suburban trains

In Botswana, the (Botswana Railways) "BR Express" has a commuter train between Lobatse and Gaborone. The train departs to Lobatse at 0530hrs and arrives at Gaborone at 0649hrs. This train returns to Lobatse in the evening, departing in Gaborone at 1800hrs. Arrival time at Lobatse is 1934hrs. The train stops at Otse, Ramotswa, and Commerce Park Halt.

BR Express Sleeping & Dining Department

BR Express Dining Department

From the beginning, the BR decided to operate its own sleeping cars, thus building bigger-sized berths and more comfortable surroundings. Providing and operating their cars allowed better control of the services and revenue. While the food was served to passengers, the profits were never result of serving the food. Those who could afford to travel great distances expected better facilities, and favorable opinions from the overall experience would attract others to Botswana and the BR's trains.

Stations

Freight trains

Freight Train of Botswana

Over half of BRs freight traffic is in coal, grain and intermodal freight, and it also ships automotive parts and assembled automobiles, sulphur, fertilizers, other chemicals, soda ash, forest products and other types of the commodities.

Locomotives

BR Express Train from Gaborone to Francistown

Diesel locomotives

As of March 2009:

  • 8 General Electric UM 22C diesel-electric locomotive, 1982.
  • 20 General Motors Model GT22LC-2 diesel-electric locomotive, 1986.
  • 10 General Electric UI5C diesel-electric locomotive, 1990.
  • 8 new gt142aces were delivered in the end of 2017.

Network

Botswana rail network
  • total: 888 km (since 2015)
  • number of stations: 13
  • standard gauge: 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) cape gauge.

Existing

Currently under construction

Proposed

Road transport

Vehicle population

  • Botswana had 584,000 locally registered vehicles at the end of June 2019[3] - more than double the number compared to 10 years prior. This equates to around 250 vehicles per 1,000 people in the country.
  • 30,583 vehicles were registered in the first 6 months of 2019.
  • Secondhand imports from Asia and the UK are a significant source of vehicles in Botswana.
Bus on the A1l
Cargo Trucking o the A3

A-roads

A-roads are highways and other major roads.

Road Connections
A1 Zimbabwe (A7) - Ramokgwebane (B315) - Tshesebe (B311) - Francistown (A3, B162) - Dikabeya (B151) - Serule (A15) - Palapye (A14, B140) - Mahalapye (B145, B147) - Pilane (B130) - Gaborone (A10, A12) - Ramotswa (A11, B111) - Otse (B105) - Lobatse (A2) - Ramatlabama (B202) - South Africa (R503)
A2 Namibia (B6) - Charleshill (B214) - A3 (south of Ghanzi) - Morwamosu (B102) - Sekoma (A20) - Kanye (A10, B105, B202) - Lobatse (A1) - South Africa (N4)
A3 A2 - Ghanzi - Sehithwa (A35) - Maun (B334) - Matopi (B300) - Nata (A33) - Dukwe (A32) - Sebina (A31) - Francistown (A30, A1)
A10 Gaborone (A1, A12) - Thamaga (B111) - Mosopa - Kanye (A2, B105, B202)
A11 A1 - Ramotswa
A12 Molepolole (B102, B111, B112) - Metsimotlhaba (B122) - Gaborone (A1) - South Africa (R49)
A14 Orapa (A30, B300) - Serowe (B145) - Palapye (A1, B140)
A15 Serule (A1) - Selebi Phikwe (B157, B150)
A20 Sekoma (A2) - Khakhea (B205) - Tshabong (B210, B211)
A30 Orapa (A14, B300) - Francistown (A3)
A31 Tutume - Sebina (A3)
A32 Sowa - Dukwe (A3)
A33 Namibia (B6) - Muchenje - Kasane - Pandamatenga (B333) - Nata (A3)
A35 Namibia - Shakawe - Sehithwa (A3)

B-roads

B-roads are smaller distributor roads.

Road Connections
B102 Morwamosu (A2) - Molepolole (A12, B111, B112)
B105 Kanye (A2, A10, B202) - Otse (A1)
B111 Molepolole (A12, B102, B112) - Thamaga (A10) - Ramotswa (A1, A11)
B112 Shoshong (B145) - Molepolole (A12, B102, B111)
B122 Lentsweletau (B123) - Metsimotlhaba (A12)
B123 Lentsweletau (B122) - east
B130 Pilane (A1) - Mochudi - Sikwane (B135) - South Africa
B135 Malolwane - Sikwane (B130)
B140 Palapye (A1, A14) - Sherwood (B141) - South Africa (Grobler's Bridge, N11)
B141 Machaneng (B147, B148) - Sherwood (B140)
B145 Serowe (A14) - Shoshong (B112) - Mahalapye (A1, B147)
B147 Mahalapye (A1, B145) - Machaneng (B141, B148)
B148 B140 - Machaneng (B141, B147)
B150 Selebi Phikwe (A15) - Sefophe (B150) - Tsetsebjwe
B151 Dikabeya (A1) - Sefophe (B151) - Bobonong (B155) - Kobojango
B155 Bobonong (B150) - Molalatau
B157 Mmadinare - Selebi Phikwe (A15)
B162 Francistown (A1, A3) - Matsiloje
B202 Kanye (A2, A10, B105) - Ramatlabama (A1)
B205 A2 - Khakhea (A20) - south
B210 Tshabong (A20, B211) - South Africa (R380)
B211 South Africa - Bokspits - Tshabong (A20, B210)
B214 Charleshill (A2) - Ncojane
B300 Matopi (A3) - Rakops - Orapa (A14, A30)
B311 Masunga (B316) - Tshesebe (A1)
B315 Zwenshambe (B316) - Moroka - Ramokgwebane (A1)
B316 Zwenshambe (B315) - Masunga (B311)
B333 A33 - Pandamatenga - Zimbabwe
B334 Shorobe - Maun (A3)

Motorways

Motorways in Botswana have a set of restrictions, which prohibit certain traffic from using the road. The following classes of traffic are not allowed on Botswana motorways:

  • Learner drivers
  • Slow vehicles (i.e., not capable of reaching 60 km/h on a level road)
  • Invalid carriages (lightweight three-wheeled vehicles)
  • Pedestrians
  • Pedal-cycles (bicycles, etc.)
  • Vehicles under 50cc (e.g. mopeds)
  • Tractors
  • Animals

Rules for driving on motorways include the following:

  • The keep-left rule applies unless overtaking
  • No stopping at any time
  • No reversing
  • No hitchhiking
  • Only vehicles that travel faster than 80 km/h may use the outside lane
  • No driving on the hard-shoulder

The general motorway speed limit is 120 km/h.[4]

Road signs

Botswana's old "caution curves" sign
New sign

Traditionally, road signs in Botswana used blue backgrounds rather than the yellow, white, or orange that the rest of the world uses on traffic warning signs. In the early 2010s, officials announced plans to begin phasing out the distinctive blue signs in favour of more typical signs in order to be more in line with the neighbouring Southern African Development Community member states.[5]

Existing

  • Kenneth Nkhwa Interchange at the junction of A1 / Blue Jacket Street and A3 in Francistown.[6][7]
  • Boatle Interchange in Boatle.

Under construction

The Government of Botswana is building three interchanges along K.T Motsete Drive (Western Bypass) in Gaborone. This project started in August 2019, and deadline date is set 2022.

Longest bridges

The Kazungula Bridge in Kazungula[8] and the Okavango River Bridge (constructed 2022) in Mohembo are the two longest bridges.

Existing

Mass transit by road

Taxicabs

In most parts of Botswana, there are many taxicabs of various colours and styles. Botswana has no limitation in taxicab design, so each taxicab company adopts its own design.

Minibus taxis

Combi (Minibus taxi)

Minibus taxis, also known as Combi, are the predominant form of transport for people in urban areas of Botswana. Most of them are found within cities, towns, major villages, and even the least populated areas.

They also have their own minibus station within a particular area; only transporting people within that specific area using different and unique routes. This is due to their availability and affordability to the public.

Most minibus taxis do not have a specific departure time that is allocated by the state and most of them have 15-seaters. The minibuses are owned and operated by many individual minibus owners.

Coach bus

Coach buses are used for longer-distance services within and outside Botswana. These are normally operated by private companies and are the only buses that have departure times allocated by the Ministry of Transport. Coach buses have multiple departures, routes, and stations all over Botswana.

Water transport

Border crossing (ferry) from Botswana to Zambia

Ferries

The Kazungula Ferry was a pontoon ferry that crossed the 400-metre-wide (1,300 ft) Zambezi River between Botswana and Zambia.

Aviation

In 2004 there were an estimated 85 airports, 10 of which (as of 2005), were paved. The country's main international airport is Sir Seretse Khama International Airport in Gaborone. The government-owned Air Botswana operates scheduled flights to Francistown, Gaborone, Maun, and Selebi-Phikwe. There is international service to Johannesburg, South Africa; Mbabane, Eswatini; and Harare, Zimbabwe. A new international airport near Gaborone was opened in 1984. Air passengers arriving to and departing from Botswana during 2003 totalled about 183,000.

Maun International Airport

International airports

Botswana has 4 international airports.

Proposed airports

  • "Mophane International Airport" is planned in Palapye Sub-District near Moremi village.

Pedestrian elevated walkways

Gaborone's Pedestrian Elevated Walkway
Gaborone's Pedestrian Elevated Walkway

Botswana has many pedestrian elevated walkways at different places.

Water pipelines

Botswana NSC and extension

North-South Carrier

NSC is a pipeline in Botswana that carries raw water, south for a distance of 360 kilometres (220 mi) to the capital city of Gaborone. It was done in phases. However, phase 1 was completed in 2000.

Phase 2 of the NSC, still under construction, will duplicate the pipeline to carry water from the Dikgatlhong Dam, which was completed in 2012.

A proposed extension to deliver water from the Zambezi would add another 500 to 520 kilometres (310 to 320 mi) to the total pipeline length.

Lesotho-Botswana Water Transport

The Lesotho-Botswana Water Transfer is an ongoing project which is expected to provide two hundred million cubic meters per year to transfer water to the south-eastern parts of Botswana.

The scheme involves the supply of water to Gaborone from Lesotho via a 600 to 700 kilometres (370 to 430 mi) pipeline.

The project commenced on the 1 August 2018 and is set for completion in June 2020.

Sea water desalination project

The Government of Botswana intends to sign the Sea Water Desalination Project from Namibia. The project is at a tendering stage.

Border posts

Pandamatenga Border Post Sign
  • Bokspits Border Post
  • Kazungula Border Post
  • Ramatlabama Border Post
  • Ramokgwebana Border Post
  • Mamuno Border Post
  • Pandamatenga Border Post
BW Tour boats

See also

References

  1. Mupimpila, C (2010-09-30). "Internalising the Externalities of Public Transport in Botswana". Botswana Journal of Economics. 5 (7). doi:10.4314/boje.v5i7.60307. ISSN 1810-0163.
  2. "Transportation and Economic Development in Botswana: A Case Study" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  3. "Vehicle population nears 600,000". MmegiOnline. Mmegi. November 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  4. "ROADS AND RAILWAYS: Botswana". Africa Research Bulletin: Economic, Financial and Technical Series. 53 (3): 21217C–21219A. 2016-04-27. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6346.2016.07003.x. ISSN 0001-9852.
  5. "Mmegi Online" staff writer Maranyane Ngwanaamotho (Dec 21, 2011). "Old road signs are being phased out". Archived from the original on November 29, 2012. Retrieved Oct 5, 2012.
  6. Ketumile, Kesentse (Jan 25, 2016). "Hello spaghetti, bye bye traffic circles". Botswana Daily News. Archived from the original on 2016-10-14. Retrieved Oct 4, 2016.
  7. "Francistown Spaghetti Junction Opens for Public Use". The Midweek Sun. Dec 16, 2016. Archived from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved Oct 4, 2017.
  8. "Kazungula Bridge to be completed". ZNBC. 28 October 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2018.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook. CIA.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.