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Briefing on the Procurement Leverage Program

Briefing on the Procurement Leverage Program. AGENDA. Context for the supplier development program Progress on the supplier development program New Initiatives Locomotive Fleet Procurement. 2. Infrastructure investment at around 5% of GDP between 1994-2004 has created a significant backlog.

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Briefing on the Procurement Leverage Program

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  1. Briefing on the Procurement Leverage Program

  2. AGENDA Context for the supplier development program Progress on the supplier development program New Initiatives Locomotive Fleet Procurement 2

  3. Infrastructure investment at around 5% of GDP between 1994-2004 has created a significant backlog Investment Gap Public investment shortfall from 1994-2009benchmarked based on 10% GDP investment in infrastructure of approximately R1,5 trillion in 2010 rands. 3

  4. A key strategic insight is that there is an industrial complex associated with infrastructure provision – this complex declined with infrastructure spend 4

  5. Similarly, the development of related skills have also tended to track the investment cycle. 5

  6. The impact on supplier industries was also seriously exacerbated by the lumpy nature of the procurement Number of Locomotives Procured Average of approximately 80 locomotives a year over 40 years 6

  7. The role of SOE in industrial policy is to drive and leverage investment in infrastructure, enabling an infrastructure driven growth and industrialisation process Unlock investment in “customer” industries through providing additional capacity Increase investment in infrastructure channeled through a procurement leverage programme Improve productivity of operations in the infrastructure service provider Increased GDP, jobs and associated tax collection Unlock investment in supplier industries through increased demand Realise externalities associated with network industries Sustained Growth Requires Continuous Investment!!! 7

  8. The Competitive Supplier Development Program has the objective of laying a platform for investment and learning by suppliers in the SOE supply chain • The objective of the intervention is to develop a procurement tool-kit and supporting measures to promote investment and the development of internationally competitive capabilities in supplier sectors to the SOE’s capital and relevant operational spend, with the aim of: • Reducing costs through increasing efficiencies • Reducing dependency on imports and foreign exchange exposure • Developing niche export areas. The key first step to the process was the design of a strategic supplier development plan by the SOE which was done in 2008.

  9. The growth impact of local supplier development is extremely significant as the imported component drops • A 25% drop in imports will have a disproportional impact on growth and output • This reflects the need to make qualitatively new investments to decrease the imported component. . .

  10. The development of local suppliers is a competitiveness initiative – un-thought through price premiums paid to increase local content could be self-defeating 1% increase in Customs Duty Price premiums paid to suppliers for local content Increased costs Increase in price charged by SOEs for services Multiplier Crowding out of investment in customer industries Price premiums could simply crowd-out investment amongst SOE’s customers while encouraging unsustainable investment amongst SOE suppliers. The objective is to build the competitiveness of supplier industries, not local content at all costs.

  11. Achieving global competitiveness in manufacture will require high levels of supplier effort and investments in learning

  12. As there is no simple text-book methodology, the first phase of the competitive supplier development program was designed to enable a “learning by doing” process by the SOE. Developing an effective operational approach and associated management capability to accumulate experience and learning so as to find out what works within constraints and opportunities of the environment Show care from the top: Hands-on top down accountability and dialogue (e.g. regular, substantive report-back meetings on progress and obstacles) Bottom up execution: Delivery organisation driven planning, implementation and learning (e.g. clear definition of projects, focus areas and targets.) Provide Support: Put in place resources and enabling initiatives that enhance delivery (e.g. specialised skills development) Output of phase one: Learning about what works in practice! 12

  13. There are three phases to the supplier development program • Optimisation of what is to be procured (to optimise capital, lifecycle cost, industrial impact) • Methodology to define, contract and manage localisation requirements. • Develop methodology for defining procurement process (how to procure). • Strong contract management skills Phase One: Transactional Capabilities Phase Two: Manufacturing Partnership Capabilities • Abililty to identify key fleets and define long term fleet requirement. • Standardisation methodology to ensure economies of scale. • Across government – enterprise coordination capability including long term funding strategy, definition of procurement vision and comprehensive government support for advanced manufacturing capabilities. • Identificaqtion of design capability vision. • Structuring of design partnership • Management of design technology transfers. Phase Three: Innovation Capabilities • We are presently moving from phase one to phase two, although enterprise capability remains weak and very uneven. • Continued focus on entrenching supplier development at a transactional level 13

  14. Segmentation Examples Required government interventions increase with degree of industrial complexity Intervention requirements • Ultra heavy forging • Pipe milling • Government driven investments for strategic economic purposes – not commercially viable in short-medium term Globallyleading • ASME III production facility • High voltage switchgear • Commercially viable but high complexity - government investment required in plant, specialised skills and technologies to enable investment Advanced Inter- mediate • Pipe prefabrication • Gas cycle system • Investment requirements within capability of company balance sheets, but clear medium term procurement commitment required • Within current industry capability • Proper planning and communication required to optimise use of industry capacity and encourage investment • Construction • Structural steel Shallow

  15. To illustrate, the Eskom CSDP will focus on intermediate manufacturing Priority components for CSDP 2008-2013 5 year CSDP targets, % local spend • Not a focus of CSDP 2008-2013 3 1 • Selected red components, e.g., • Large power transformers • C&I transmitters and transducers • Electrical actuators • Boiler feed pumps 36 28 • All yellow components, e.g., • Small and medium power transformers • Fan shafts • Bag filters 59 16 99 • All green components, e.g., • Air-cooled condensors • Boiler fuel cycle • Cables and conductors 90 • 2008 • 09 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 2013

  16. Eskom has leveraged over a billion rand of investment in manufacture from the present build programme – although interventions have been largely ad-hoc • Plant that saw global manufacture of 275kV insulators move to South Africa • Previously manufactured in Switzerland • Investment complete and first production units rolled off production line Pfisterer investment of R25m in plant in KZN • Sulzer South Africa subcontracted for the production of 96 pumps (36 BFP, 24 CEP, 36 boosters) for Medupi and Kusile • 45% of contract has local content commitments, including manufacture of castings and rotating components • Manufacturing capacity investments by Sulzer expected to be ~R60m • Sulzer revenues increased significantly since 2007 • 11,000m2 boiler pressure part workshop built in Nigel • Boiler Membrane Wall Workshop • Two new CNC Benders commissioned • New welding training centre • CNC header drilling machine • Training facilities in Gauteng • 1400 artisans, 60 engineers, 36 operators, 24 maintenance workers Hitachi is investing ~R900m in facilities and training in South Africa Sulzer SA, a local manufacturer of feed pumps, has invested R60mn • Expansion of existing facilities to manufacture MV switchgear locally • R21m invested to date Actom committed to an investment of R84m in local facilities

  17. Eskom has also leveraged the training of 6130 people by suppliers. Majority of training takes place in the following disciplines: Coded Welders, Boilermakers, Riggers, Fitters, Technicians, Laboratory technicians and Quantity Surveyors. 17

  18. Eskom has also established component hubs to enable the identification of supplier development opportunities for specific components. • Transformer and motor: • CTC • Tanks • Radiators • Boiler plant: • Filter bags • Pressure vessels • Boiler steel • Turbine plant • Valves • Blades • Motors & pumps • Foundry • Castings for various components • Nuclear • Industry awareness for future programme Skills Benchmarking Accreditation Funding • Independent chair • Industry Associations representing suppliers • Development of business cases for funding of R&D, skills development and shared technical infrastructure Chair Customers Pre-qualified suppliers Industry association Competitive assurance These hubs will see the South African Industry aligning itself to the future demand from SOE’s prior to the commercial transaction 18

  19. Transnet has secured three major CSDP transactions • The current CSDP plan with EMD was finalised in November 2009. • The EMD CSDP plan aims for (1) TRE to become part of their Global Supply Chain for rebuilt traction motors and diesel engines, (2) to accredit TRE’s maintenance facilities for EMD locomotive maintenance and (3) to localise the supply of at least 10% of the value and/or quantity of the parts listed per the Spare Parts Agreement. • These CSDP goals will be achieved through the transfer of skills and relevant intellectual property required to carry out the activities mentioned. • EMD is already actively supporting TRE in acquiring new work in Africa.. • Execution of the EMD CSDP plan is well underway EMD: Spare parts Contract Value:R550 million 50 “Like new” locomotives • 50 “Like-new” programme now complete under the equivalent of the CSDP Framework using Transnet Rail Engineering • The contract for the building of the 100 Locomotives was awarded to GE and signed on 17 December 2009. • GE developed a CSDP plan consisting of 3 main initiatives – training for maintenance development, Lean, Six Sigma and Candidate Engineers; localisation of various components and parts as well as a licence agreement with TRE for the overhaul and modernisation of GE locomotives. • The signing of the CSDP Plan was concluded on 30 June 2010 • The Licence Agreement would allow for TRE and GE to enter into a technology partnership for locomotive overhauls and modernizations, with GE being the prime contractor and TRE the sub-contractor. GE: 100 Loco deal Contract Value:R2.6 billion 19

  20. In addition, Transnet has made significant progress in enhancing procurement capability and engaging with suppliers Capability Building Collaboration forum • Initiated the use of the R&HSCA (Rail & Harbour Supply Chain Association) as a collaborative initiative with local tier 2 & 3 suppliers • Transnet in partnership with the United Nations Development Organisation (UNIDO): • Pioneered the establishment of a benchmarking program of its top twenty tier two South African suppliers as well as the top 60 tier 3 suppliers. • The objective is to enhance the competitiveness of these suppliers and position them as key components of Transnet Original Equipment Manufacturers supply chain. • Integrated South African Procurement • Academy (ISAPA): • Independent Procurement Academy has been established • Provides globally recognised qualifications through both customised e-learning and classes. • Transnet launched a comprehensive procurement capability building program. • Core to the program is an ambitious procurement skills development program, that is being run in partnership with the Chartered Institute of Procurement in the UK. • Presently, 235 learners are registered in courses in the program. • During phase 1, twelve people have already achieved a fast-track globally recognized honours degree in Procurement. 20

  21. A key challenge is that SOE complex procurement capabilities are historically weak – there is a gap between our aspiration and capability Planning Execution Industrial Outcome • Degraded balance sheet leading to short term focus • Engineering bias, leads to limited standardisation • Institutional fragmentation • Limited understanding of supplier cost drivers • Engineering bias – over specification • Stop start because of balance sheet. • Poor risk and incentive allocation • Poor contract governance / management capabilities • Limited negotiation capability • No scale • Short term investment mindset • No specialisation • Win – lose relationship • Seen as an unattractive market by OEMs. Degraded Industrial Capability SOE Governance - Process, rather than substance orientated SOE Culture - Inward-looking, limited learning

  22. The fleet or programmatic procurement process was developed to ensure that the impact of key strategic procurements are optimised. This should align policy, planning and execution in targeted fleets Presently, none of these fundamentals are in place Imperative to have an institutional mechanism to quality control the process!!!! • Development and disclosure of long term fleet plans • Fleet refers to any long term equipment of a similar function that is essential to maintain an operation or service. • A standardisation strategy needs to accompany the fleet plans. • A credible funding mechanism needs to be in place to support the procurement plan giving suppliers a reasonable degree of certainty that the program will be sustained. • Supplier industry consolidation, often associated with the selection (or establishment) of a national capability champion to lead investment in a capability. • The ability to structure and manage the procurement of complex systems that include technology transfers and investment in industrial capability.

  23. A draft policy has been developed based on managing the quality of the procurement process • The policy provides a definition of the information required by decision makers, who will be organised in review panels, at key milestones or moments in the relevant process • The review panels will have the responsibility of evaluating the rigour and coherence of the commercial and developmental case presented before giving a mandate for the procurement to continue • Depending on the nature of the transaction there are 3 key processes that can be followed each with different milestones: Step 3: Formulate policy • The policy was formulated based on the gateway review system to ensure quality control. • Three policies were developed a programmatic policy ,a transactional policy and an innovation policy • The policy focuses on the crucial elements that need to be addressed but allows for flexibility to reach these decisions • The policy is supplemented by guidelines to guide implementation • Programmatic Process 1 • Transactional Process 2 • Testing for Innovation 3

  24. The objective of the programmatic / fleet policy is to enable long-term fleet procurement with significant developmental impacts 1 • The comprehensive and rigorous identification of developmental impacts that justifies the funding support and risks associated with undertaking the procurement • The management of the quality of the procurement process through an external review panel. • The provision of financial support for the procurement by government or related institutions so as to go beyond the funding abilities of the balance sheet of the buying institution • The identification and containment of risks that go beyond the normal planning horizon of the commercial entity such as those related to the length and scale of the procurement and the industrialisation process • The systematic provision of required support by government to ensure the achievement of the vision

  25. The objective of the transactional policy is to integrate supplier development concerns into all procurements where there is value leverage 2 • The transactional process addressed both strategic procurement and ‘catch-all’ transactions • Strategic procurement refers to transactions which have a shorter duration than programmatic procurements (short to medium term) but can still address investment in in plant and/or technology to develop supply chain around a particular industry • These transactions are generally constrained by the funding ability of the buying institution but targeted government support can still be obtained for the development of advanced industrial capabilities • Catch-all are transactions that by virtue of their scale can be used to encourage supplier development. Therefore the focus is generally on investment in technology or skills that enhance existing capability but will not lead to development of the supply chain around a particular industry Source: Team Analysis

  26. The objective of the innovation policy is to allow for testing of a local product within an operational environment 3 • Various initiatives such as CSDP and Enterprise Development currently exist where SOEs are involved in supplier development via their procurement spend. • This type of involvement takes place through formalised procurement processes. • Many local suppliers may not have opportunities to compete because their products may not have been formally tested or are still in the conceptual design • Therefore in order to support these local suppliers the SOE could assist by providing them with an operational testing platform for their products. • This will require support from the dti and DST allow suppliers to develop their product as an enterprise development project, enabling them to participate in the procurement processes of SOEs in the future. Source: Team Analysis 26

  27. A centre of excellence will be established to support organisations undertaking complex procurement • The centre of excellence will be responsible for: • Supporting the selection an external review panel • Provide focused support for fleet procurements – particularly in understanding of the relevant global and national supplier community. • Creating a mechanisms for knowledge accumulation and sharing across transactions • Conducting benchmarking of procurement capability • To provide support and facilitate training on complex procurement 27

  28. Transnet need to replace its aging locomotive fleet through a long term fleet procurement which will provide a platform of stable demand to re-establish a viable local industry Avg age 33 years Desired Age • Benefits to Transnet • Improved availability and reliability • Lower maintenance costs and faster turnaround through standardisation • Facilitate movement from road to rail • Transnet’s primary (diesel) and secondary (electrical) carbon footprint will be reduced Need to procure 120+ locomotives a year to provide a critical mass for industrialisation 28

  29. 6 To sustain the current locomotive fleet requires an additional 70 locomotives per annum • Major runouts are expected between 2014/15 – 2018/19 and 2019/20 – 2027/28 • Based on 30 year life approximately 70 locomotives are required per annum to sustain current fleet • From 2014/15 the runout increases to around 700 locomotives in five years which equates to approximately 140 locomotives per year. • This accords with the historical procurement pattern • High runout rate predicates extending locomotive life to 45 years No. of locos required To sustain fleet (2007-2025) No. per year 2 400 2 200 2 000 1 800 1 600 1 400 1 200 1 000 800 600 400 200 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Source: TFR loco fleet plan 29

  30. 6 Government also needs to consider the positive externalities of goods going by rail, rather than road. Road Externality Costs • Total road externalities of around R34bn per annum • Road costs 5x the ton per km than rail 30

  31. The decision on what models to buy for the fleet is extremely complex and strategic!!! • Opportunity Cost • The cost to the company in lost revenue due to the non-availability, delay or cancellation of trains • The cost of customers moving from rail to other forms of transport due to poorperception of rails reliability • Capital Cost • The initial cost of the locomotive • Lifecycle cost • The total cost of the locomotive over its lifecycle including energy, maintenance and operating costs. • The speed of absorbing a technology into the system. • Industrialisation • The capability and capacity of the domestic locomotive manufacturing & service industry to “absorb” a technology. • The ability to use capabilities for manufacture in different applications • The ability to compete in global supply chains Capital Cost Opportunity Cost Lifecycle Cost Industrial-isation • Standardisation • Higher standardisation leading to larger demand and lower LCCs through inter-operability, lower maintenance costs, less specialised skills.. Source: Team Analysis

  32. High life cycle costs may make sense is certain contexts… • Standardisation • Low standardisation due to small purchases linked to donor aid • Low Cost Locomotives • Link to Donor Aid Capital Cost Opportun-ity Cost Lifecycle Cost Industrial-isation • Low OC due to low utilisation of rail network • E.g. delay or cancellation of trains has little impact on company or its reputation • High LCC driven by low availability • Low cost spare parts required frequently • Locomotives are fuel inefficient and have very high emissions • Lack of standardisation drives up cost of training, operations, maintenance • Small purchase numbers make localisation unfeasible • Low technology parts which are easy to localise • No export potential as parts are build using existing industrial capability • Limited benefits to other industrial sectors as capabilities already exist Source: Team Analysis

  33. Through the programmatic fleet procurement, the supplier industry can be significantly developed Current Localisation Breakdown for Locomotives Percentage of Loco Value (%) ILLUSTRATIVE • Localisation can be improved from ~ 33% of the value of a locomotive to as much as ~ 85% through focussed programmatic procurement of locomotives • An additional 8% of the locomotives value is currently localisable and would not require large amounts of support to achieve • A further 44% of future potential exists to localise components. This would require support and investment into the supplier industry to facilitate learning and incentivise supplier effort • Realistically, of the 44% of future potential to localise, approximately 30% can be converted to tangible development opportunities • Approximately 15% would not be feasible to localise owing to a lack of financial and commercial viability 100,00 43,39 15,00 8,18 33,43 Local Content Localisable Future Potential to Localise Not Feasible to Localise Total

  34. 6 SOE procurement leverage and the locomotive fleet procurement are cornerstones of the IPAP strategy – a more robust governance mechanism is required to enhance impact. • Joint DPE – dti - ED Ministerial oversight of the over-arching roll-out of the supplier development process required to enhance accountability and support – quarterly meetings with the CEO of Eskom and Transnet. • Collaborative operational committee put in place with SOE Supplier Development Champions (nominated by CEOs) which will meet to: • Assess progress • Assist in the removals of obstacles. • Develop support program • By the end of September, both Transnet and Eskom will have prepared their next generation supplier development plans • It is proposed that the Oversight Committee calls for a presentation of these plans 34

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