Tanzania plans cable car for Mount
Kilimanjaro
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[May 08, 2019]
By Nuzulack Dausen
DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) - Tanzania wants to
boost tourist numbers by putting a cable car on Mount Kilimanjaro,
Africa’s tallest mountain, and is in talks about the project with a
Chinese and a Western company.
Around 50,000 tourists climb Kilimanjaro annually. A cable car could
increase tourist numbers by 50 percent by providing access to the
mountain for those unable to climb it, Constantine Kanyasu, the deputy
minister for tourism, said.
The country is conducting feasibility studies on possible routes at the
moment, Kanyasu told Reuters.
"We are still doing a feasibility study to see if this project works,"
he said. "There are two companies one from China and another from a
Western country that have shown interest."
"This won’t be the first time in the world, cable cars are there in
Sweden, Italy, the Himalayas,” he said.
Kanyasu said the government was looking at business plans, potential
investors and profits.
The length of the route has not been finalised, with various options
under consideration depending on cost and engineering issues, the
minister said. An environmental impact assessment would also be carried
out, he said.
Porter and guide groups who take tourists up the mountain oppose the
project because they fear cable cars will reduce the number of climbers.
Loishiye Mollel, head of Tanzania Porters' Organization, said visitors
normally spend a week climbing the mountain.
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A vehicle drives past Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania's Hie district
December 10, 2009. REUTERS/Katrina Manson
"One visitor from the U.S. can have a maximum of 15 people behind
him, of which 13 are porters, a cook and a guide. All these jobs
will be affected by a cable car," he said.
"We are of the view that the mountain should be left as it is."
There are about 20,000 porters working between Mount Kilimanjaro and
Meru, another mountain nearby, he said.
Tanzania's earnings from tourism jumped 7.13 percent last year,
helped by an increase in arrivals from foreign visitors. Tourism
revenues raised $2.43 billion for the year, up from $2.19 billion in
2017.
Tourism is the main source of hard currency in Tanzania, known for
its beaches, wildlife safaris and Mount Kilimanjaro, which has three
volcanic cones and is nearly 5,000 meters high from its base.
(Editing by Katharine Houreld and Jane Merriman)
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