 
     Shem Oirere looks at the beneficial effect of cargo tracking.     
     
The mandatory installation of electronic cargo tracking and security (ECTS) systems in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda has helped enhance revenue collection, enforce cargo handling requirements, improved the business environment of the respective countries’ trade routes and helped cargo hauliers cut costs.
     
This is being spearheaded by the state-owned tax collection agencies and the improved custom duty collection has not only enabled a reduction of import tax in some instances, but has also made it possible for governments to reduce tax on cargo.
     
Kenya Revenue Authority, Uganda Revenue Authority and Tanzania Revenue Authority have reported success in addressing illegal cargo dumping, improving security of cargo along the region’s Northern Corridor. Cargo dumping is where goods destined for, say, Uganda are illegally diverted into the Kenyan market and previously such activities have led to huge losses in tax earnings. The technology has also improved operations at the ports of Mombasa and Dar es Salaam and reinforced the agencies’ drive to automate their services. 
     
According to 
     Fact File Kenya, Tanzania & Uganda 
                 
 200% Increase 
for ECTS installations in 2013 
         
OVER 5,000
consignments monitored between May and September 2014 saved ...
         
 ... $252,690
in escort fees by frieght companies that installed tracking systems in their prime movers    
Freight Watch highlights difficulties in collecting accurate cargo crime data because incident reporting ‘remains extremely poor throughout Africa’. Some of its information comes from the media but it said sometimes the incident is only described in general terms rather than detailing the items taken and the methods employed by the thieves.
Mandatory fitment
While technology behind ECTS became available in early 2004, it was only in April 2010 that the Kenyan government introduced the mandatory installation requirements and Uganda followed in November 2013. However some companies did preempt the legislation and in partnership with private hauliers, freight forwarders and government revenue agencies, rolled out cargo tracking technology in East Africa to help curb the thefts and minimise losses on transit cargo. 
     
One example is Switzerland-based 
“Using this technology, we are assisting Kenya’s customs  processes so   that trucks entering Kenyan territory are equipped with  GSM/GPRS   communications,” says Vincent Tibbs, governments and  institutions   services regional ECTS manager at SGS’s East Africa office.
     
Electronic    seals fixed to containers are coupled with the trucks using radio    frequency identification (RFID) and predefined transit corridors are    configured into the system for geo-fencing purposes.
“Trucks  that deviate from the predefined route are immediately identified and  the customs control room notified. If the seals are tampered with or  broken, an alarm is triggered, so customs can take immediate action,”  said Tibbs.
     
An in-vehicle  module (IVM) is installed into the prime mover and communicates with the  seal attached to the cargo via RFID. The seal is electronically and  physically sealed (known as ‘arming’). “Once armed the seal communicates  with the IVM if there is an anomaly in the cargo including attempts to  open the seal, cutting the seal or removal of the container from the  prime mover/truck,” says Tibbs.  
     
“All the above alerts would then be sent by the IVM to the monitoring platform and trigger an automated email,” he said.
     
According  to Tibbs, additional alerts include confirmation that the seal is  armed, notification when the seal is disarmed, departure from the origin  and arrival at the destination. It will also notify excessive dwell  time at a particular location, any deviation of the vehicle/cargo from  the predetermined route, tampering of the IVM and disconnection of the  vehicle battery (the IVM has an internal power source lasting at least  48hrs). The email alerts are sent to SGS, Kenya Revenue Authority and  the company contracting the ECTS services. 
     
“In  addition, the SGS control room would call the client directly and  liaise with the Kenya Revenue Authority and police in instances where  the cargo has deviated from its approved route or the seal is being  tampered with,” said Tibbs. 
     
He  said since December 2013 SGS has seen the number of installations for  ECTS increase by 200%. This is mainly because of the requirements of the  revenue authorities in East Africa and the realisation by reputable and  large hauliers and freight forwarding companies of the facility to  track their cargo and the benefits of doing so.
  
Thwarting crime
Although  he could not give the total number of cargo crime cases thwarted with  the introduction of the tracking system, Tibbs cited a few examples of  how the tracking system saved loss of goods on transit especially on the  crime prone Nairobi-Nakuru highway. For example, on 1 September 2014, a  cargo vehicle was attacked by armed highway robbers at Mai Mahiu on the  Nairobi-Nakuru highway. Luckily, the driver and his turn boy (driver’s  mate/assistant) managed to escape. SGS’ Control Room engaged officers  from the Kenya Revenue Authority and police’s Naivasha Highway Patrol  Unit who quickly deployed security officers to the crime scene to secure  the cargo which was later confirmed as remaining intact.
 
In  Uganda the practice was for the owners of transit  goods to employ  escorts as a way of deterring criminals and other  attackers – a practice  which had increased the cost of some goods  before the introduction of  the tracking systems. Analysis by Uganda’s  Revenue Authority on the  effect of the introduction of a tracking  system supplied by Malaysia’s  Bsmart Technologies has revealed a  drastic reduction in cargo escorts  and the associated fees. 
     
Between   May and September 2014, there were 5,151 consignments monitored by the   Uganda Revenue Authority in which an estimated $252,690 was saved in   escort fees by freight companies that installed tracking systems in   their prime movers.
     
Before   the introduction of the tracking technology, it was observed for   example that 200 consignments cost US$9,370 per day for physical escort.   The consignments cost another US$73,500 for two days in  container/truck  retention and another US$7,207 in parking fees for the  two days. The  trucking companies were spending an average of US$90,000 a  month on  these costs.
     
“The  tracking  technology has removed the need for physical escorts,” said  Joseph  Mwangala, project manager for the Customs Business Systems  Enhancement  Project at the Uganda Revenue Authority. “The system  monitors goods  which have been armed with the eseal/etrack 24/7 and we  have officers  stationed in the Central Monitoring Centre to monitor the  movement of  those cargoes.”       
     
He says   because the system provides real-time information “it is able to tell   that a truck has stopped, or is moving and at what speed and the   location.”
Mwangala said   unlike in some developed countries, there are no   official truck stop   areas on transit on the Northern Corridor which   creates the persisting   issue of unscheduled stops.
     
“The     driver can stop anywhere if necessary because there are not gazetted     stop points but we keep monitoring him and if we find that there are   too   many stops then we get in touch with him and direct him to drive   to  the  cargo’s point of destination,” he said. 
Mwangala    said the electronic tracking system has helped foil the thefts of   cargo  in transit. “In one incident, a well-planned attack on a truck   ferrying  cargo from Kampala to South Sudan was averted because the   vehicle was  being monitored. No sooner had the attackers struck than   messages were  sent to the control monitoring centre in Kampala. The   attackers had  waited for the truck to reach a steep stretch of the   highway where they  planned to open the sealed doors and steal the   cargo.” 
     
He said the driver was alerted of the tampering with the doors and stopped, forcing the attackers to flee. 
     
 
     
Although cargo    owners have supported the introduction of the tracking system in the    region, transporters have expressed concern at the cost of the    technology.
     
“The    installation cost of the device is US$1,050, the monthly subscription is    US$45 and each electronic seal costs US$40,” said Kenya Transporters    Association chairman Paul Maiyo.
     
 The association wants more companies    licenced to issue the electronic tracking system to encourage    competition and bring down costs.  
 
     
         
         
        



