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Work on EA standard gauge railway starts in 2012

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The Kenya Railways Corporation managing director, Mr Nduva Muli. Photo/PETERSON GITHAIGA

The Kenya Railways Corporation managing director, Mr Nduva Muli. Photo/PETERSON GITHAIGA  

By FRED OLUOCH  (email the author)
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Posted  Monday, August 23  2010 at  00:00

It is now emerging that the logistics needed for the planned East African standard gauge railway network will pose enormous challenges.

These are however outweighed by the opportunities.

All the five members of the East African Community have agreed in principle to build the lines in their territories.

The construction of the Regional Railway Standard Gauge Network kicks off in Kenya in February 2012 and will be fully rolled out in the entire region by 2050.

The network has four phases. The first will be the Mombasa-Malaba-Kampala line, which will be joined by the Kampala-Kigali-Bujumbura line.

There is also the high capacity standard gauge railway line from Lamu to Lokichogio for onward connection to Juba; and a high capacity standard gauge line from Nairobi to Moyale for onward connection to Addis Ababa.

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These projects are part of development plans in Kenya’s Vision 2030.

Kenya Railways managing director Duva Muli says that the cost of transport in the region is very high compared with world benchmarks, hence the need for the regional standard gauge railway.

Mr Muli noted that the transport element for goods and services in the region was as high as 45 per cent of total costs, compared with less than 15 per cent in countries with good railway systems.

Uneconomic and unreliable inter-urban passenger transport has also led to congestion in cities, while the shift from rail to roads has resulted in high costs of road maintenance.

“If business in the region continues to grow, then the Mombasa port will have to process at least 30 million tonnes a year. And if the railway network remains the same, then a truck will have to leave the port every minute of every day, putting major strains on road infrastructure. It could lock out most transit goods,” Mr Muli said.

Mr Muli noted that the existing metre gauge railway network faces challenges of obsolescence, limited capacity in tonnage and speed.

As a result, the railway accounts for less than 4 per cent of freight haulage to and from the port.

The proposed Lamu port —with a natural deep harbour and a corresponding railway network — will have the potential of creating a land bridge across Africa.

The corporation is looking at the prospects of a Lamu-Douala train network that would take four and a half days. The voyage by sea takes 25 days.

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Add a comment (1 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by mayega
    Posted August 23, 2010 11:22 AM

    When I read this I as disappointing. It seems our "leaders" don't have the required sense of urgency. First they must realize there is NO WAY any country in East Africa will become a high performance economy without a good rail network. It is just not possible. Then they should act like they truly want to develop there countries and make this a national/regional priority. No rail = No Real Industry Period.

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