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China Exports of HSR, Trains, Metro, Tram, Rolling Stocks, etc: News

Kenya's $13 billion railway project is taking shape
By Phoebe Parke, for CNN
Updated 0138 GMT (0938 HKT) May 16, 2016

(CNN) It's been billed as the most ambitious project in Kenya since it gained independence in 1963. Now, the first section of the east African nation's $3.8 billion railway is nearly finished.

Originally planned to link Mombasa and Nairobi, the decision was made to extend the line to the market town of Naivasha in 2015, and 75% of civil works have reportedly been completed. This first Mombasa-Nairobi stretch will be completed by June 2017, consulting firm CPCS told CNN.

It is hoped that the track will shorten the journey between the two cities from 12 hours to four hours. Passenger trains will travel at 120km/h, and freight trains will be able to carry 25 million tonnes per year, according to the International Railway Journal.

Eventually, the East Africa Railway Masterplan will link Mombasa with other major east African cities such as Kampala, in Uganda, and Juba, in South Sudan.

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Planned routes of railway

Investment from China


The East Africa Railway Masterplan is being managed by the East Africa Community; an inter-governmental organization of six partner states; Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda, which aims to create a politically united and secure East Africa.

Management consulting firm CPCS advised the East Africa Community on the financial, legal and economic impact of the project.

The railway is being built by the state-owned China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), 90% of the ongoing development of the Mombasa-Nairobi section is being financed by The Export-Import Bank of China.

The hope is that this new railway will reduce congestion on Kenya's crowded road network, and promote tourism.
This railway is the most expensive of a series of construction projects in Africa.

According to Deloitte, more than $131 billion was spent on transportation construction on the continent in 2015; by 2025, $200 billion is expected to be spent on the continent's roads, and another $7 billion dollars on African airports.

China has been investing in other projects in Africa, including a mega port in Lamu, Kenya, and a manufacturing zone in Ethiopia.

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My comment: This railway will benefit East Africa immensely.
 
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With CRRC Times Electric Propulsion System,
Diesel locomotive Successfully Conquered the Australian Devil Curve Line

CRRC nailed it at the third trial, GE merely passed at the sixth trial

On Apr. 10, SDA1 diesel locomotive whose propulsion system was provided by CRRC Times Electric (CRRC TEC) passed through COWAN BANK test route named hairpin curve. This means the locomotive passed the most complicated qualification test in Australia and got the TOC waiver for operating in New South Wales.

From 2011 to 2013, as the only one CRRC in-house core electric system provider, CRRC TEC had provided propulsion system consisting of traction converter system, auxiliary converter system, network system and other core components to CRRC Ziyang for 18 SDA1 AC-Diesel locomotives. The maximum power and speed are respectively 3000kw and 120 km/h. In 2012, SDA-1 locomotives got the approval to operate in ARTC network in South Australia, West Australia and Victoria. Next challenge is approval from Australia Asset Standard Authority (ASA) in New South Wales.

The experiment was taken in the Hawkesbury River -- Cowan bank with a total length of 8.5km,of which More than 75% of the whole sections are ramps with 25‰ gradient. And the most difficult section is the 25‰ gradient ramp with 220 meters continuous S type curve. As required by ASA, the testing should be with single locomotive operated and the whole railway is watered by sprinkler. Manual sanding is prohibited. The lowest speed can’t be less than 10km/h and test time can’t exceed 26 minutes. And uncontrolled wheel slips are not allowed to happen.

Due to weather conditions and other issues, the diesel locomotive did not meet Australian requirements during the first two tests. Australian expert even claimed that “It’s impossible that SDA1 can pass COWAN bank test with bogie control and single locomotive, hauling 1500t”. Engineers of CRRC TEC upgraded 4 software versions which were the result of continuous discussion, analysis, calculation and improvement.

Finally in the third test, the diesel locomotive finished the whole journey in 24 minutes. The certification engineer sang high praise for the perfect performance of the SDA1 diesel locomotive. They also mentioned that no single operated locomotive hauling 1500t had passed COWAN test before. SDA1 is the first diesel locomotive to pass the most difficult test of Australia for both axle control and bogie control with single locomotive hauling 1500t.

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Zhuzhou CRRC Times Electric Co., Ltd. (TEC)
Zhuzhou City, Hunan Province, Central China




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Zhuzhou CRRC Times Electric Co., Ltd. (TEC), a subsidiary company under
CRRC, is the world’s leading propulsion and control systems provider for high
speed trains, EMUs, mass transit, electric locomotives and diesel locomotives.

TEC already applied these solutions for about 4000 mass transit vehicles, 3000
mainline locomotives and 7000 high speed train vehicles/EMUs worldwide.

Other than propulsion and control system, TEC provides
integrated electrical package including signaling systems, substation power
supply systems, platform screen door systems and key components.

Led by Mr. Ding Rongjun, one of the most reputed academicians of Chinese
Academy of Engineering, TEC has become a global power mall for railway
transportation with over 800 patents. Experiences worldwide allow TEC to come
up with customer-orientated solutions with excellent quality and reliability.
 
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More news on the East Africa/Kenya rail line.

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Thursday, June 16, 2016
Kenya readies first standard-gauge line
Written by Shem Oirere

Kenya is on course to complete a new Chinese-funded 472km standard-gauge railway line linking Mombasa with Nairobi in the second half of 2017. Shem Oirere reports from Nairobi on progress so far and assesses the project's prospects for success.

THE 12-hour train journey from Kenya’s capital Nairobi to the port city of Mombasa, 483km away, has taken on a different feel in recent months. Construction crews are hard at work to complete a new standard-gauge line which runs alongside the colonial-era metre-gauge railway and is promising to reduce the same journey by eight hours from June 2017.

The new 472km line is a sight and development to behold. The Chinese-funded link is the largest single infrastructure project since Kenya gained its independence in 1963, and features eight underpasses where it crosses the world-famous Tsavo National Park. It also has 98 bridges, including two large structures at points where it traverses the existing line, which is part of a 1918km network linking Kenya with Uganda operated by concessionaire Rift Valley Railways (RVR) since 2005.

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Kenya Railways Corporation (KRC) managing director Mr Atanas Maina said on April 28 that work on the $US 3.8bn project is now 75% complete. Specifically the engineering, procurement and construction management contractor, China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) has completed 75% of the civil works which constitute 92% of earthworks, 81% of concrete works, 30% of stations and nearly 30% of track laying.

Maina says of the 472.3km line, 442.6km runs at grade and the total bridge length is 29.7km. “There are 33 stations along the line, of which two will be traffic hubs at both ends and eight will be intermediate stations while 23 will be passing stations,” Maina told IRJ.

The line has been designed with an axleload of 25 tonnes and could move 22 million tonnes/year at a speed of 80-100km/h for freight trains and 120km/h for passenger trains. Each of the freight trains will have a haulage capacity of 4000 tonnes, or 216 TEUs, and accommodate double-stack containers.

However, electrification of the line, which was initially incorporated into the design, will have to wait a little longer because of the lack of an adequate and reliable electricity transmission platform. The government is planning to construct new coal and nuclear power stations with a network of transmission lines that will facilitate railway electrification.

The new line also runs parallel to the Mombasa - Nairobi highway which is laden with truck traffic. According to the director general of Kenya’s National Bureau of Statistics Mr Zachary Mwangi the port of Mombasa’s freight throughput was up by 11.5% from 22.3 million tonnes in 2013 to 24.9 million tonnes in 2014. The container volumes at the port also increased by 13.2% to one million TEUs in 2014 up from 894,000 TEUs in 2013.

“The rise in TEUs was partly because of the improvement of the facilities at the port and the improvement of the single window platform that allows online transactions for international trade, thereby maximising port efficiency,” Mwangi says.

Mwangi also points out that RVR’s freight traffic is improving despite a sharp drop in passenger traffic in recent years, and it is this growth on which state-owned KRC is pegging its projections for the new line under the expectation that this momentum will continue.

Indeed with the World Bank projecting Kenya’s economy to have grown by 6% last year compared with forecasts of 4.5%, demand is increasing for modern infrastructure to support the country’s steadily expanding GDP.

Loans

Financing for the new line is provided by the Exim Bank of China which agreed to support 90%, or $US 3.42bn, of the project’s costs. The overall loan consists of a $US 1.6bn concessional loan payable over 20 years and a commercial loan of $US 1.82bn payable over 15 years. Both loans have been guaranteed by Kenya’s National Treasury. Yet achieving sufficient traffic volumes on the standard-gauge line to meet the cost of operations and repayment of the loan at this stage is far from assured

As a result the project is not without sceptics. President of the Kenya-based AB International Enterprise, Dr Anil Bhandari, who is also a former World Bank senior infrastructure advisor for the Africa Region, told IRJ in Nairobi it is not definite how KRC will ensure that required rail freight traffic uses the new line when RVR is competing in the same market.

“In my view, there is no adequate freight that can be moved by both the standard-gauge link and the metre-gauge line operated by RVR,” Bhandari says. “Passenger numbers are so low currently and with proper rehabilitation of the metre-gauge by RVR, the freight volumes could easily be increased to about 15 million tonnes, which could have been easily done without a new standard-gauge line.”

However, KRC’s chief of technical services Mr Solomon Ouna told an infrastructure conference in Nairobi recently the standard-gauge feasibility study indicated that the revenue stream “would cover the cost of operation and maintenance as well as external loan obligations and post good surplus for capital projects.”

“The existing metre-gauge railway has serious challenges in capacity provision due to obsolescence and unresponsiveness to any meaningful upgrade efforts,” he said. “Kenya’s railway problems are difficult to solve using the same narrow gauge technology which create the present railway problems.”

KRC is expected to own the standard-gauge infrastructure but appoint an operator for the line, which is acceptable to China Exim Bank in accordance with the government’s financing agreement with China. The financing deal also requires the Kenyan government to meet any revenue shortfalls when the line becomes operational after June 2017 and also to modernise and expand the existing inland container terminal at Embakasi on the outskirts of Nairobi to handle containers using the new railway.

Bhandari proposes that KRC should go a step further by appointing two contractors - one for operations and the other for maintenance with the corporation owning the infrastructure.

“KRC should also consider an open-access model for the standard-gauge line where companies with their own trains can use the line at specified times and pay the corporation an access fee,” Bhandari says.

Despite the uncertainties with the freight and passenger projections, and doubts over future competition between the two lines, Maina is also optimistic that both lines will carry sufficient volumes. “The growth of freight handled by the port of Mombasa is increasing and there will be sufficient volumes for both the standard-gauge and the existing metre-gauge railway,” he says.

While the hope is that once operational the line will provide the foundation for further economic growth in Kenya and east Africa, the first phase of the project has already provided additional jobs. Maina says the project has provided nearly 19,000 local people with direct employment and about 6000 indirectly. “More than 250 local suppliers have been directly engaged with supplying materials and subcontracting services to the project,” he says.

Some of the local sub-contractors’ input on the project include drainage works, slope protection works and grassing, as well as supply of materials such as sand, cement, fuel and steel. Local car hire and logistics service providers have also been sub-contracted by CRBC. However, according to Ouna, mobilising enough large local contractors to partner with CRBC to realise the 40% local content target for the project is a major challenge.

In addition to the main civil works, the Chinese contractor will also construct four freight terminals, build a traffic control centre for the entire line in Nairobi, and supply and install utilities and signalling and information technology facilities at the 33 stations. CRBC will also organise the supply and commissioning of 56 locomotives and 40 passenger coaches. The number of freight wagons has yet to be decided.

Maina added that the new line’s uniform specification “will permit seamless operation across borders.” Indeed the new Kenyan line is part of the larger Mombasa - Malaba - Kampala - Kigali - Juba rail network and the governments of Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and South Sudan have signed a protocol on its implementation under which each of the countries is expected to construct its respective section.

Uganda has already awarded China Harbour Engineering Company a $US 3.3bn contract for the 237km section from Malaba to Kampala and construction is tentatively scheduled to begin in July with financial support for the project from China’s Export Import Bank. This section will eventually link with Kenya’s Nairobi - Malaba/Kisumu extension. The first component of this phase is the 120km line from Nairobi to Naivasha to serve a proposed industrial park next to Africa’s largest geothermal fields in Kenya’s Rift Valley.

Challenging

The extension crosses rugged terrain and is the most challenging of the project. It will require 28km of bridges and 8.5km of tunnels, including one which will be 5.3km long and 70m deep and is expected to take five years to drill. The route also has high embankments and the cuttings will require slope protection according to its design details. It will also span existing infrastructure such as roads and the metre-gauge line. This section will cost $US 1.5bn, or $US 12.5m per km compared with $US 8m per km for the 472km stretch between Mombasa and Nairobi. Kenya has signed a commercial contract with China Communications Construction Company for the project and work is expected to commence in September.

Beyond this the feasibility study and preliminary design for part two of the second phase of the project from Naivasha to Malaba/Kisumu have been completed and are now being evaluated for approval by the government. However, realisation of this part of the project is expected to take longer because of what Ouna describes as “development complexity and financing challenges.”

Topographical challenges have similarly been a major issue with the construction of the Mombasa - Nairobi section, including land reclamation at the Mombasa terminus.

Land acquisition, which is the responsibility of the National Lands Commission, another government agency, is another major challenge, proving a tedious and long process which has held the project back.

“Kenya’s land policy on infrastructure development is ill defined and often leads to litigation,” Ouna says. He estimated that more than $US 139m was needed to pay for land acquisition for the Mombasa - Nairobi phase and that the National Lands Commission has had to deal with a “multiplicity of stakeholders including peasants, fishermen, county governments and people’s representatives.”

“Our legal process encourages litigation aimed at stopping any form of infrastructure development,” he says.

Metre gauge

Development of the standard-gauge project comes as RVR is investing $US 305m to rehabilitate the Mombasa - Nairobi - Malaba - Kampala railway and improve rolling stock, with funds coming from loans ($US 164m), equity ($US 100m) and company cash flow ($US 41m).

“In the first five years of the concession, RVR set out to remove infrastructure bottlenecks, resolve priority track rehabilitation issues and continue with maintenance capital expenditure,” says Mr Sammy Gachuhi, chief marketing and commercial officer at RVR.

Gachui says RVR is addressing efficiency on the metre-gauge line by overhauling information technology, signalling, operations and locomotive systems “to achieve modernised operations.” He adds that the concessionaire’s strategy is to “maintain the existing client base and grow freight volumes by 15-20%.”

In 2014 RVR’s Kenyan freight traffic grew by 24.3% from 1.24 million tonnes in 2013 to 1.51 million tonnes with Mwangi attributing it to “the acquisition of three new locomotives and the rehabilitation of the existing fleet.”

However, RVR has been grappling with falling passenger numbers, with a 5% reduction in journeys from 4 million in 2013 to 3.8 million in 2014. “The drop in passenger journeys was partly attributed to suspension of railway passenger transport services along the Nairobi - Kisumu route,” Mwangi says.

It is hoped that the improvements will attract passengers to return to the existing network. It’s a similar story on its metre-gauge suburban services in Nairobi which cover 160km of track and are currently used by 13,000 people every day. KRC is also targeting improvements in the capital’s rail services and is implementing the Nairobi Commuter Rail Service project which involves modernising and expanding under-utilised railway infrastructure to boost public transport in Kenya’s capital.

The project is aiming to attract passenger traffic from the congested city roads by creating “an efficient and affordable mass rapid transit transportation system” and KRC has set an optimistic target to increase passenger capacity in Nairobi to 15 million from the current 5 million by the end of 2016 and 60 million passengers by 2018.

Specific components of this project include upgrading of track and signalling systems, constructing a new 6.5km line from the Syokimau station to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and adding new stations.

Maina said in February that KRC has submitted fresh requests for funds to finance construction of the airport rail link, which was first mooted in 2011, and he says this and other rail projects are now a major element of Kenya’s Vision 2030 strategy for economic development.

“Numerous projects have been put in place under Kenya’s Vision 2030 and central to this plan is the necessity to move people and goods,” Maina says. “The railway sector is on an uphill climb to make this happen.”

He adds that KRC is working tirelessly to improve its operations and facilities, enhance skills and technology transfer, and be a key strategic player in the transport industry, thus be a key contributor to national development.

The standard-gauge line is a sign of real progress and evidence that the government is starting to deliver on its vision to promote sustainable growth in Kenya and the rest of east Africa as the region strives for full common market status. And with other projects planned, all eyes are now on this line and its ability to facilitate the fast and safe movement of goods and people between Nairobi and Mombasa. If successful, the momentum to develop these other projects is expected to grow.
 
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News from Hungary, but about half a year ago....

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China wins $1.6bn contract to support Hungary-Serbia high-speed rail
26 November 2015

The governments of China and Hungary have signed an agreement on the development, construction and financing of the Hungarian section of Hungary-Serbia high-speed railway.

Under the agreement, a consortium led by China Railway Group (CRG) has been awarded a CNY10bn ($1.57bn) contract to build the 160km Hungarian section of a railway linking Budapest with Belgrade, and will also be responsible for the general management of the project.

In addition to CRG, the consortium includes CRG's China Railway International Group (CRIG), China Railway International (CRI), a subsidiary of national operator China Railway Corporation and Hungarian State Railways.

Both CRI and CRIG will jointly hold an 85% stake in the consortium. The Chinese firms will finance 85% of the project, while the remaining 15% will come from Hungary.

Construction of a high-speed line is scheduled to start this year.

The project is said to be the first concrete success of the China-Central and Eastern European Countries (CEEC) partnership.

The 350km Hungary-Serbia project is expected to be completed in two years.

The project is an additional two-track linking line and electrification project of the existing railway, with the designed maximum speed of 200km/h and a designed operating speed of 160km/h.

In July, Stadler Bussnang won a €125m contract from Hungarian State Railways' passenger unit MÁV-Start to deliver 21 additional Flirt electric multiple units (EMUs).

The modern, energy-saving EMUs will be operated on Budapest's suburban services.
 
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China should increase the speed on rated tracks to 350 kph and beyond. This means that for cities within 1000 km apart, HSR will be very competitive with airplane. This will showcase China's HSR technology which will help in exports.
However, watch out for the air travel lobby in China. They are learning quickly the bad tactics from their US counterparts.

(Note: Japan's HSR is mostly rated at 240 to 260 kph with only a very small section capable of reaching 320 kph.)


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News Analysis: China discusses speed hikes for bullet trains
Source: Xinhua | 2016-06-12 18:06:14 | Editor: Tian Shaohui

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Ahead of an international exhibition, China's railway insiders returned to topic of whether to increase the top speed of bullet trains. The proposals to increase the top speed on China's high-speed rail (HSR) network have emerged as China seeks to export its trains and HSR technology. (Source: Xinhua)


BEIJING, June 12 (Xinhua) -- Ahead of an international exhibition, China's railway insiders returned to topic of whether to increase the top speed of bullet trains. The proposals to increase the top speed on China's high-speed rail (HSR) network have emerged as China seeks to export its trains and HSR technology.

"Technology and safety controls allow bullet trains to run at a maximum speed of 350 km per hour," explained He Huawu, chief engineer with China Railway Corp. (CRC), the country's railway carrier and a major successor of the dismantled ministry of railways.

He made the remarks earlier this week at a news briefing for the 13th China International Modern Railway Technology & Equipment Exhibition scheduled from June 20 to 22.

In summer 2011, the ministry lowered the top speed of bullet trains to 300 km per hour over safety concerns.

The decision was made shortly after Sheng Guangzu, now CRC general manager, replaced disgraced chief Liu Zhijun to head the ministry.

A deadly train collision in July that year in east China's Zhejiang Province cast a shadow on the burgeoning industry, although the following investigation found no evidence to link speed to the incident

"In a strategic move, China should restore the designed speed of 350 km per hour to demonstrate that the rail technology is safe and reliable," said Zuo Dajia, associate professor at the Southwest Jiaotong University.

Although some countries seemed cautious about cooperation with Chinese enterprises, a number of overseas rail contracts have been inked, including a high-speed line between Russia's Moscow and Kazan.

"China's restoration to the designed speed will benefit the exports of high-speed trains and technology," Zuo added.

China currently operates more than 19,000 km of HSR track, accounting for more than 60 percent of the world's total. The network is quickly increasing as the country upgrades its transport infrastructure.

Policymakers must now carefully weigh up the profits and costs before deciding whether to increase the operation speed.

"The current limit is reasonable in terms of operational and maintenance costs," said the CRC chief engineer.

Higher speeds can translate into an increase in power consumption, noise, and wear and tear, according to Sun Zhang, a railway professor at Tongji University.

He gave an example: Nearly all the bearings had to be replaced after a bullet train completed a test in late 2010 with its peak speed reaching 486.1 km per hour.

"Speed increases will definitely lead to cost hikes. But it is difficult for outsiders to calculate as the whole system is so complex," said Hu Siji, a professor with Beijing Jiaotong University.

Higher speeds can also add more pressure on train drivers and other staff.

Despite all the drawbacks, Zuo said higher speed means less trains will be needed, thus, less expenditure for the CRC.

"I did not see any comparison between the increase in operational costs and the decrease in purchase expenditure," said Zuo.

The CRC chief engineer told media outlets that it could be a different story if higher speed brings in more passengers or leads to fare increases.

"A thorough study is needed to decide whether and when to increase the speed," he said.
 
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China rail giant delivers first batch of locomotives to Kenya
(People's Daily Online) 11:08, July 02, 2015

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(File Photo)​

Dalian Locomotive and Rolling Stock Company, a subsidiary company of CRRC Corp, the rail equipment manufacturing behemoth formed after the merger of CSR and CNR, held a delivery ceremony for the locomotives to be exported to Kenya, China News Service reports on Monday.

The supply contract, signed in early 2015, includes 13 locomotives. Kenya is the eighth country that Dalian Locomotive and Rolling Stock Company exports its products to.

With a maximum speed of 100 km per hour, these locomotives will run at the railway connecting Mombasa, East Africa's largest port, and the capital Nairobi. It is the country's first railway since its dependence.

Based on the Dongfeng 4D diesel locomotive, these batch of locomotives have been improved taking into account of local environment, according to Dalian Locomotive and Rolling Stock Company, the manufacture.

This is the first time that the company has sold locomotives to Kenya.
 
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Nigeria's Abuja-Kaduna Railway Starts Trial Operation
2016-06-19 10:31:41 | CRIENGLISH.com | Web Editor: Liu Yuanhui

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A newly-built train is about to leave Idu Railway Station in Nigeria on Friday, June 17, 2016. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com]

Nigeria's Abuja-Kaduna Railway, constructed by China Civil and Engineering Company (CCECC), started its trial operation on Friday.

This is the first railway in Africa that has been built based on Chinese technical standards.

A train completed a test run on the railway on Friday with a speed of 80 km per hour, with about 100 Chinese and Nigerian staff on board.

According to CCECC, the trial operation aims to provide the Nigerian staff a training exercise before the railway starts official operations.

The 187-km rail link, which connects Nigeria's Idu to its northern business center Kaduna City, is part of the Lagos-Kano standard gauge project.

The railway has nine stops and will feature both passenger and cargo trains. It was designed for trains with an average speed of 150 km per hour.

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A newly-built train is about to leave Idu Railway Station in Nigeria on Friday, June 17, 2016. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com]

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A train completes a test run on the railway, with About 100 Chinese and Nigerian staff on board on Friday, June 17, 2016. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com]

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Friday, June 17, 2016, Idu Railway Station in Nigeria. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com]
This is a pretty decent looking Railway Station.
 
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Chinese, Uzbek leaders hail inauguration of Central Asia's longest railway tunnel

TASHKENT, June 22 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Uzbek counterpart, Islam Karimov, on Wednesday hailed the inauguration of the Qamchiq Tunnel in Uzbekistan, saying it is a major achievement of the Belt and Road Initiative.

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The Kamchiq tunnel is a 19.2 kilometres (11.9 mi) long railway tunnel in Uzbekistan, which makes it the longest tunnel in Central Asia.

The tunnel was built by the China Railway Tunnel Group in collaboration with the Uzbek Railways and leads through seven geologic faults. Construction began September 2013 and the excavation works were finished 27 February 2016. In January 2014, work was delayed by an avalanche, covering the entrance with 78 metres (256 ft) of snow.

The tunnel is part of the Angren-Pap railway line.

IIRC, this railway tunnel reduces the time from Angren to Pap from about 4 days to 4 hours. Previously, they have to go through Tajikistan with immigration & custom clearances adding to the time.
 
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Some pictures of the Qamchiq Rail tunnel.

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A train stops at the entrance of the Qamchiq Tunnel on the Angren–Pap railway line inUzbekistan on Feb. 27. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Under construciton - Qamchiq Tunnel on the Angren–Pap railway line in Uzbekistan.(Photo/Xinhua)

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Backgrounder: Qamchiq Tunnel, longest railway tunnel in Central Asia
Xinhua, June 22, 2016

The Qamchiq Tunnel in Uzbekistan, the longest railway tunnel in Central Asia, has been completed and put into trial operations.

The 19.2-km tunnel goes through the Qurama Mountains and is part of the 169-km Angren-Pap railway line, a major state project of Uzbekistan which connects the country's capital, Tashkent, with the eastern city of Namangan.

The construction of the tunnel began in July 2013 and was undertaken by China Railway Tunnel Group.

The tunnel is also a key cooperation project in the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, which is expected to reduce regional transportation costs and help boost trade and economy.
 
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Some pictures of the Qamchiq Rail tunnel.

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A train stops at the entrance of the Qamchiq Tunnel on the Angren–Pap railway line inUzbekistan on Feb. 27. (Photo/Xinhua)

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Under construciton - Qamchiq Tunnel on the Angren–Pap railway line in Uzbekistan.(Photo/Xinhua)

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Backgrounder: Qamchiq Tunnel, longest railway tunnel in Central Asia
Xinhua, June 22, 2016

The Qamchiq Tunnel in Uzbekistan, the longest railway tunnel in Central Asia, has been completed and put into trial operations.

The 19.2-km tunnel goes through the Qurama Mountains and is part of the 169-km Angren-Pap railway line, a major state project of Uzbekistan which connects the country's capital, Tashkent, with the eastern city of Namangan.

The construction of the tunnel began in July 2013 and was undertaken by China Railway Tunnel Group.

The tunnel is also a key cooperation project in the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, which is expected to reduce regional transportation costs and help boost trade and economy.
I think it's the longest one in Asia outside East Asia?
 
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Hopefully, more Eurasian countries adopt the standard gauge railway...

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China breaks ground on northern cross-border standard-gauge railway line
(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2016-05-31

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Ground-breaking ceremony of Ceke railway construction project, on May 26. [Photo/ Alxa League Daily]


A ceremony at the land port of Ceke, Inner Mongolia, on May 26, marked the beginning of construction work on China's first cross-border standard gauge railway line in the region, as a part of the country's "Belt and Road" initiative whose plan is to revitalize the old Silk Road and the maritime Silk Road linking East and West.

The Ceke railway project will provide a "seamless link" between China and Mongolia and is expected to increase the amount of trade between the two countries.

It will also connect with other important domestic railways to form an energy transmission web and will join the Beijing-Moscow and Siberia - Europe lines, ultimately reaching at the port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, as a "Eurasian Land Bridge".

By that time, the Ceke railway is expected to be carrying 30-million tons of freight annually, making it China's largest land port, and an example for others to follow.
 
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Hopefully, more Eurasian countries adopt the standard gauge railway...

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China breaks ground on northern cross-border standard-gauge railway line
(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2016-05-31

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Ground-breaking ceremony of Ceke railway construction project, on May 26. [Photo/ Alxa League Daily]


A ceremony at the land port of Ceke, Inner Mongolia, on May 26, marked the beginning of construction work on China's first cross-border standard gauge railway line in the region, as a part of the country's "Belt and Road" initiative whose plan is to revitalize the old Silk Road and the maritime Silk Road linking East and West.

The Ceke railway project will provide a "seamless link" between China and Mongolia and is expected to increase the amount of trade between the two countries.

It will also connect with other important domestic railways to form an energy transmission web and will join the Beijing-Moscow and Siberia - Europe lines, ultimately reaching at the port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands, as a "Eurasian Land Bridge".

By that time, the Ceke railway is expected to be carrying 30-million tons of freight annually, making it China's largest land port, and an example for others to follow.

Integrating Mongolia into China's sphere of economy is critical in terms of (de facto) correcting one of the historical anomalies in terms of China's territorial integrity.
 
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It's really good to see a project that is ahead of schedule. It will starting generating benefits earlier for Kenya.

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China-funded high-speed railway to be completed ahead of schedule: Kenyan president
Source: Xinhua | 2016-05-30 18:16:50 | Editor: huaxia

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Photo taken on May 28, 2016 shows a view of track-laying at a construction site of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) project, near Sultan Halmud, Kenya. (Xinhua/Pan Siwei)

KAJIADO, Kenya, May 30 (Xinhua) -- Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said over the weekend that China-funded high speed railway which runs from the coastal city of Mombasa to Nairobi will be completed ahead of the schedule.

Kenyatta, who visited a section of the 472 kilometer standard gauge railway (SGR) project which is more than three-quarters done, said once completed, the project will enhance Kenya's position as a regional business hub.

Speaking during the inspection, Kenyatta said that the government is in talks with investors to put up industrial parks along the SGR line so as to create jobs for Kenyans.

"We have discussed on how to set up industrial parks at Dongo Kundu in Mombasa, Voi, Mtito Andei, Nairobi and Naivasha, which will help us create jobs for our young people," he said.


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Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta (3rd R, front) tightens the screw during his inspection of a construction site of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) project near Sultan Halmud, Kenya, May 28, 2016. (Xinhua/Li Baishun)

China Road and Bride Corporation (CRBC) is implementing the SGR project that has already created an estimated 30,000 jobs for Kenyans, fulfilling one of the major demands that jobs be handed to local communities during the construction of what is the biggest investment in east and central Africa.

Kenyan officials say the modern railway line will ease congestion on the roads while reducing pollution arising from heavy vehicular traffic along Nairobi-Mombasa highway.

Besides promoting investments and growth of industrial sector in the region, the SGR project will also facilitate cross border movement of skilled labor, technology and innovations.

The president was briefed that the SGR is on schedule, and runs within budget.

The rail had by February injected 500 million U.S. dollars directly into the pockets of Kenyan suppliers following Kenyatta's directive that 40 percent of supplies of goods and services to the SGR be local content, the president was told.


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Photo taken on May 28, 2016 shows a view of track-laying at a construction site of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) project, near Sultan Halmud, Kenya. (Xinhua/Pan Siwei)

More than 75 percent civil works have been completed on the first phase of the project, with over 235 km trackline laid between Voi and Sultan Hamud.

Major progress has been made on construction of 33 stations including 23 passing stations, eight intermediary stations, and two major stations in Mombasa and Nairobi.

The second phase of the project will cover 487 km from Nairobi-Kisumu-Malaba and it is divided into three sub-phases. These phases include 2A, which is 120 km from Nairobi to Naivasha.

Financing has been identified and construction is expected to start in September this year, Kenyatta said.

Phase 2B, which is 262 km, will stretch from Naivasha-Narok-Bomet-Ahero-Kisumu while phase 2C will cover 107 km from Kisumu-Yala-Mumias-Malaba in western Kenya.

Kenyatta said the implementation of the SGR will not only boost the transport development, but also promote integration and industrialization in the East and Central Africa.
 
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