Transport in Tanzania
Transport in Tanzania includes road, rail, air and maritime networks. The road network is long, of which is classified as trunk road and as regional road. The rail network consists of of track. Commuter rail service is in Dar es Salaam only. There are 28 airports, with Julius Nyerere International being the largest and the busiest. Ferries connect Mainland Tanzania with the islands of Zanzibar. Several other ferries are active on the countries' rivers and lakes.
Roads
The Tanzania National Roads Agency - an Executive Agency under the Ministry of Works, Transport and Communications - came into operation in July 2000 and is the agency responsible for the maintenance and development of the trunk and regional road network in Mainland Tanzania. The total classified road network in Mainland Tanzania was estimated to be based on the Road Act 2007. The Ministry of Works through TANROADS is managing the national road network of about, comprising of trunk road and of regional road. The remaining network of about of urban, district and feeder roads is under the responsibility of the Prime Minister's Office Regional Administration and Local Government.In 2007 there were of roads, of which including was paved. The road network ranked 51st worldwide by length.
Trunk roads
- Dar es Salaam and Dodoma : The A-7 road links Dar es Salaam and Morogoro. The B-129 road then connects Morogoro with Dodoma.
- Dar es Salaam and Iringa : The A-7 road links these cities.
- Dar es Salaam and Tanga : The A-7 road links Dar es Salaam and Chalinze. The A-14 road then connects Chalinze with Tanga.
- Dar es Salaam and Mtwara : The B-2 road links these cities.
- Tanga and Arusha : The A-14 road connects Tanga and Segera. From there, the B-2 road connects Segera with the road's terminus at the Himo Junction. The A-23 road then leads west to Moshi and Arusha.
- Dodoma and Mwanza on Lake Victoria : The B-129 road leads west to Manyoni, followed by the B-141 road north to Singida. From there, the B-3 road leads mostly west to Nzega. The final stretch is on the B-6 road through Shinyanga to Mwanza.
- Dar es Salaam and the border with Rwanda at Rusomo Falls : From Nzega in the Tabora Region, the B-3 road leads to the Rwandan border.
- Kigoma and the border with Burundi at Manyovu: The road is entirely paved.
- Mwanza and Musoma : The B-6 road connects these cities and then proceeds north to the Kenyan border.
- Arusha and Namanga on the Kenyan border : The A-104 road links these cities, with its terminus in Tunduma on the Zambian border.
Road No. | Length | Span | Via | Status | Remarks |
A7 | 492 km | Dar es Salaam - Iringa | Chalinze - Morogoro - Mikumi | Paved | |
A14 | 315 km | Chalinze - Horohoro | Segera - Tanga | Paved | Continues in Kenya up to Mombasa |
A19 | 620 km | Masasi - Mbamba Bay | Tunduru - Songea - Mbinga | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Masasi - Ngomano Road and Namtumbo - Mbinga |
A23 | 117 km | Arusha - Holili | Moshi | Paved | Continues in Kenya up to Voi |
A104 | 1,218 km | Tunduma- Namanga | Mbeya - Iringa - Dodoma - Kondoa - Arusha | Paved | Entirely part of Cairo-Cape Town Highway, recently paved: Dodoma - Babati |
B1 | 263 km | Segera - Himo | Paved | Connects A14 with A23 | |
B2 | 561 km | Dar es Salaam - Mtwara | Kilwa - Lindi | Paved | Paved 30 km road to Kilwa Masoko from Nangurukuru |
B3 | 625 km | Singida - Rusumo Falls | Nzega - Isaka - Kahama | Paved | Runs with B6 Nzega - Tinde, Continues as RN3 in Rwanda up to Kigali |
B4 | 293 km | Makambako - Songea | Njombe | Paved | |
B5 | 120 km | Mingoyo - Masasi | Paved | Connects B2 to A19 | |
B6 | 1,071 km | Makogolosi - Sirari | Rungwa - Tabora - Shinyanga - Mwanza | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Nzega - Sirari, Runs with B3 Nzega - Tinde |
B8 | 1,128 km | Kasesha - Mutukula | Sumbawanga - Mpanda - Kasulu - Biharamulo - Bukoba | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Lusahunga - Mutukula |
B129 | 388 km | Morogoro - Manyoni | Dodoma | Paved | |
B141 | 308 km | Rungwa - SIngida | Itigi - Manyoni | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Itigi - Singida |
B143 | 151 km | Singida - Babati | Paved | ||
B144 | 390 km | Makuyuni - Kukirango | Karatu - Ngorongoro - Serengeti National Park | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Makuyuni - Ngorongoro, rest can't be paved because it's a National Park |
B163 | 230 km | Usagara - Biharamulo | Sengerema - Geita | Paved/Unpaved | Unpaved: Bwanga - Biharamulo, a paved road runs via Chato to go to Bukoba |
B182 | 171 km | Nyakasanza - Kyaka | Kimisi - Burigi Game Reserve - Omurushaka | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Omurushaka - Kyaka, connects B3 to B8 |
B182 W | 111 km | Omurushaka - Murongo | Unpaved | Branches from B182 and runs up to Murongo border crossing with Uganda | |
173 km | Bulahu - Lamadai | Bariadi | Paved/Unpaved | Paved: Bariadi - Lamadai, marked as trunk road by TANROADS but no number | |
59 km | Nyakasanza - Kobero | Ngara - Kabanga | Paved | Branches from B3 up to Kobero border crossing with Burundi, continues as RN6 there |
Regional roads
- Mtwara Region: Paved roads link Mtwara and Masasi and from there almost to Nangoma. An unpaved road then leads to Mtambaswala and the modern Unity Bridge on the Mozambique border. The African Development Bank in April 2012 approved a loan to Tanzania to pave this road, followed in April 2013 with an additional loan of 7.659 billion yen from Japan.
- Western regions are the most poorly served, with no paved highways except locally in Kigoma and Ujiji. Only one dirt road runs down the western side of the country, it is just a track between Kasulu and Sumbawanga and prone to flooding south of Mpanda. Between Tunduma in the south-west and Nyakanyazi junction near Kibondo in the north-west, a distance of nearly 1000 km, there are no highways in the centre of the country.
International highways
In the southwest, from Iringa to Tunduma, the Cairo-Cape Town Highway follows the Tanzam Highway linking Zambia and Dar es Salaam.
Rail transport
In 2008 Tanzania had of rail, ranking it 46th in the world by length It includes of Metre gauge and of gauge track. On 31 March 2015 the Tanzanian government announced it would use $14.2 billion of commercial loans to build new rail infrastructure across the country before 2021 and make the country a regional transport hub.Tanzania Railways
Proposals have been made for a railway to link Mtwara to iron ore deposits in the west, possibly connecting to Mbeya.The central line between Kigoma and Dar es Salaam carries international freight and passengers in transit from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Rwanda to the Indian Ocean, and the branch from Tabora to Mwanza carries freight and passengers between Uganda and the Indian Ocean.
Isaka Dry Port is a small town and station on the Mwanza Line at its intersection with the paved highway to Kigali. It has been developed into a so-called 'dry port' for trans-shipping Burundian and Rwandan road freight onto freight trains for the seaport of Dar es Salaam. There are proposals to build a railway from Isaka to Rwanda/Burundi.
TAZARA Railway
The Tanzania-Zambia Railway Authority, formerly also called TanZam Railway operates of narrow gauge track. It is not a part of Tanzania Railways Corporation, and because of the difference in gauge there is no rail connection between the networks. There is a container trans-shipment yard to transfer freight containers between TAZARA and Tanzania Railways Corporation at Kidatu near Morogoro. This allows containers to be shipped from as far as Uganda and Kenya via the Lake Victoria train ferries and the Kidatu yard to the Southern African rail network via Zambia.- Dar es Salaam - ocean port - 8 km from TRC line
- Kidatu - break of gauge connection with Tanzania Railways Corporation, with a container trans-shipment facility
- Mbeya
- Tunduma - Zambian border
Urban rail
Air transport
Airports
Air travel is regulated by the Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority. The Tanzania Airports Authority operates 25 airports out of the 58 aerodromes on the Tanzania mainland. Kilimanjaro International is managed by the state-owned Kilimanjaro Airport Development Company, whilst airports in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar Archipelago are under the jurisdiction of the Zanzibar Airports Authority. Fifteen airports offer the airport of entry service.Air services, both chartered and scheduled, are provided by local airlines such as the flag carrier Air Tanzania, Precision Air and Coastal Aviation. Prior to the launch of Fastjet, a low-cost carrier, air travel was and still is unaffordable for the vast majority due to high fares. The lowest fare offered by Fastjet for a single journey is US$20 and its domestic route network is limited to only five destinations as the Airbus A319 requires of runway for takeoff.
The government is cognizant of the importance of air travel to the economy and has therefore rehabilitated airports at strategic locations such as Kigoma to capture the market from neighboring countries. It intends to construct Kajunguti International Airport in the northwest to serve the African Great Lakes region. Other major airports under planning and consideration are Msalato International and Serengeti International, which will serve the capital Dodoma and the Serengeti National Park respectively.
Airstrips
There are a considerable number of both public and private airstrips. Tanzania Airports Authority manages 32 airstrips, such as Morogoro and Singida.The Tanzania National Parks Authority operates 26 airstrips in national parks. Seronera Airstrip is the busiest in the country. Sixty-one airstrips are operated by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism.
Private organisations own 93 aerodromes such as the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation operating Songo Songo Airstrip.
Maritime transport
Ports and harbours
There is an abundance of coastal and lake waterways. In the central areas there are no navigable lakes or rivers. There is a strong maritime tradition going back centuries. Zanzibar was once the chief port on the East African, Indian Ocean coast. Its hinterland reached into Central Africa as far as the middle Congo River. Swahili traders used dhows to conduct trade though many ports along the coast. This tradition continues today with motorized craft. In 2010, the government announced plans to develop a new port at Mbegani, near Bagamoyo as a deepwater harbour with a two-berth container terminal.Ferries
;Lake VictoriaFor about 80 years, the Lake Victoria ferries have carried rail wagons and vehicles from Uganda to Tanzania. The ferries are jointly run by the railway companies of Tanzania and Uganda and are the main means of transport between Tanzania and Uganda as well as between northern Tanzania and southwestern Kenya. Other ferry services link the Zanzibar archipelago and Tanzanian ports.
;Lake Tanganyika
Once a rival to Lake Victoria as a waterway, the Lake Tanganyika ferries are no longer as busy and train ferries no longer operate. Trade has suffered from wars in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Small ferries link communities along the Tanzanian shore, and commercial traffic runs between Kigoma and Bujumbura, Burundi and Mpulungu, Zambia, including the MV Liemba.
;Lake Nyasa
Communities along the northeast shore are linked by ferry, and Malawian steamer and boat services have run the length of the lake for about 120 years.