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Karachi Circular Railway (KCR)

12kms trial run to precede KCR revival

Sindh, Centre discuss strategy for launching circular railway project


October 03, 2020


Only Chinese companies would participate in the bidding for contracts for all civil and engineering work and would earn a profit of up to 20% to 25% on their investments.


KARACHI: The federal and Sindh governments have agreed to start trial runs of local trains within 12 kilometres during the next two months and then plan how to synchronize it with the modern circular railways system in the next phase.

The decision was taken in a meeting held between Federal Planning Minister Asad Umar and Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Saturday to chalk out a strategy for launching the Karachi Circular Railway (KCR) project.

The federal minister was assisted by Federal P&D Secretary Mathar Niaz, Railways Secretary Habibur Rehman, Additional P&D Secretary Rafiq Chandna, KCR Project Director Ameer Mohammad, Railways Planning DG Imran Mishal, and Karachi DC Arshad Salam Khatak.

The chief minister was assisted by Minister Transport Awais Qadir Shah, Chief Secretary Mumtaz Shah, Advocate General Sindh Salman Talibuddin, P&D Chairman M Wasem, Karachi Administrator Iftikhar Shahalwalni, PSCM Sajid Jamal Abro, Karachi Commissioner Sohail Rajput, Finance Secretary Hassan Naqvi, Transport Secretary Sharik and Additional CM Secretary Badaruddin Shaikh.

The KCR was commissioned in 1964 and remained in operation until 1984. It was abandoned in 1999, as it had lost its operational efficiency.

The relaunch of the project was agreed in a recent meeting of the Council of Common Interests (CCI) in order to implement the directive of the Supreme Court.

During the meeting, Chief Minister Murad said that the Sindh government had approved the initial feasibility for the KCR revival in 2006. Then the project was to be undertaken through the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), which revised the feasibility.

Murad said that the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) revised the feasibility of $2.6 billion in 2012, adding that the JICA remained engaged in the project from 2006 to 2012 but the agreed financing arrangements could not materialise.

The matter was taken up with the then prime minister in December 2016, with a request for including the KCR in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) framework and the issuance of sovereign guarantee for its revitalisation.

According to the chief minister, the prime minister also requested to hand over the Karachi Urban Transport Corporation (KUTC) and the right of way to it to the Sindh government for construction and management of the KCR.

“The prime minister approved all of the requests, and for handover of ROW [right of way], a committee was formed,” the chief minister told the meeting. “I personally followed up at every stage and wrote a dozen letters to the federal government on the matter.”

The KCR loop has an overlapping section of 12 kilometres with the Pakistan Railways’ Mainline (ML)-1 project launched under the CPEC framework. He said that Ecnec approved the project in 2017, at a cost of Rs207.6 billion ($1.97 billion) through Chinese loan.

The total length of the KCR is 43.13, including 14.95 kilometres on the ground and 28.18 kilometres elevated. It will have 24 stations and is expected to ferry around 550,000 passengers every day. Murad said that the project was supposed to be completed within 36 months.
 
The locomotive with 7 coaches for #Karachi Circular Railway is finally ready.

Coaches will be equipped with charging facilities, Wifi, TV, GPS system, Train stoppage information system and advanced washroom facility.


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#Pakistan #Railways announces restoring #KCR from Monday

Pakistan Railways has announced that it will partially resume the inner-city Karachi Circular Railway service from Monday, November 16—after a 21-year closure.

A spokesperson said that four trains will leave from Landhi and four from Orangi town in the first phase. They will depart at 7am, 10am, 1pm and 4pm.

This comes after the Supreme Court issued on Tuesday a contempt notice to the Sindh chief secretary over his failure to ensure the removal of encroachments from the Karachi Circular Railway track.

A show-cause notice has also been issued to the Railways secretary. The two senior officials have been summoned in person at the next hearing along with the FWO DG.

The project’s complete track will start from Drigh Road station, going through Gulistan-e-Jauhar and heading to Gulshan-e-Iqbal. From there it will turn towards Nazimabad going through Yaseenabad and Liaqatabad. The track then heads to Manghopir and SITE before going taking a turn towards Baldia and going through Lyari, Mereweather Tower, City Station and onward to PIDC and Karachi Cantt.

The KCR would then run parallel to Sharae Faisal and go through Chanesar Goth, Shaheed-e-Millat, and Karsaz before completing a round trip at the Drigh Road station


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Dilapidated track: #KCR train covers 14km in two hours in test run

The test run of the much-awaited #Karachi Circular Railway (KCR) has begun, as a KCR train comprising four bogies and two locomotives travelled a 14-kilometre-long distance from Karachi’s City Railway Station to Orangi Town, according to the people familiar with the matter.

The train took around two hours to cover the entire distance which was supposed to take minutes, they said, adding this was due to the dilapidated condition of the tracks and stations.

As the railway ministry has announced to run the first train from November 16, not a single station, platform or ticket office was in presentable condition, sources said.

Federal Railways Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed had last Wednesday said that the 14km KCR track was ready while the remaining track would be laid by the Sindh government. “As many as 10 coaches are ready to ply the KCR track while work on 40 more coaches is underway” he added.

According to Pakistan Railways, the KCR project would be completed in three phases. The length of the project was 43.13km, including 14.95km on ground and 28.18km elevated. KCR would have 24 stations and its per-day ridership would be around 550,000

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lmao, thats not how metro trains seat arrangements supposed to look like, seems like old regurgitated/refurbished boggy previously used for inter city travel.

regards
 

The boggies are renovated old discarded boggies of pakistan railways :lol:

@ 2:20

as expected

Here is more interesting

According to officials, the circular train will cover a distance of 46 km in an hour and a half. Railway officials say that Karachi Circular Railway is a deficit deal, its operational expenses will not be met.


as expected as well, they are not meant for long term period as well, in short just a gimmick, nothing else.

regards


how many passengers will be interested in paying 50 rupees for such slow third rate slow ride btw? PTI said its 30 RS but its actually 50
 
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The boggies are renovated old discarded boggies of pakistan railways :lol:

@ 2:20

as expected

Here is more interesting




as expected as well, they are not meant for long term period as well, in short just a gimmick, nothing else.

regards


how many passengers will be interested in paying 50 rupees for such slow third rate slow ride btw? PTI said its 30 RS but its actually 50

It is a joke. A bad one
 
Many of you guys are missing the point here. The major achievement is removing kilometers of encroachments. The project once it start running will see improvement gradually. Once it is running federal can invest in up gradation.
It is done by Pakistan railways, you cannot expect railways which in itself has been destroyed by nepotism, political appointees, unions (it is no different than PIA) and is a loss making entity, to fund 4-5 billion dollars?
Orange train is a burden on Pakistan from an economic perspective. It requires just 80 billion of subsidises to run, the interest and the principal loan repayment is on top of it. The point is Punjab government is running this project by paying all those expenses (pti government is generous) that is more than the money spent on many Punjab districts combined. Sindh government under ppp will not do that and transfer the load on federal and only play politics and sindhi card by saying federal is not giving them money.

At the end of the day there is no interest of PPP in doing any work in Karachi, they just want to milk the city. They get the whole share of Karachi under 18th amendment. They will never spend a single rupee on it. This is where the major problem lies.
 
Chief justice took action and revived local bodies system but didn't ensure empowerment, so they delivered nothing.

Once again, chief justice took notice and revived KCR, this is more like a jugaar/temporary fix done in a way to to just meet the deadline fixed by supreme court and nothing else.

regards
 
Man I must say, you people are nothing but a bunch of thankless & retarded folks, who always find a reason to whine day in day out.

Yes, KCR might not be the best circular in the world, granular details might not be great, however, atleast its a step in the right direction. So instead of jilting the project since get go, give it sometime and if you cant say anything good/positive, then its not your religion duty spit venom - give it some rest. In fact, the more post I read here on PDF the more I realize that its knack of my fellow countryman to rant just about anything and everything.

I am also from Karachi and I welcome this excellent initiative.
 
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Just listen to the arguments of Ex mayor, Waseem Akhter @ 6:40

 

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