Dec 01 2010 |
more articles from
|
Gulf rail network awaits approval
Wednesday, Dec 01, 2010
Gulf News
Project likely to BE COMPLETEd BY 2017
Dubai A long train journey to exotic destinations across the Gulf countries would be possible if final permission is granted to the GCC railway project at the Abu Dhabi summit of the GCC.
The much-talked about 2,117km rail network, starting in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, is likely to be completed by 2017 to unite the Gulf.
Once the green light is given, the massive rail project will go ahead to the network construction phase and tenders could be called as early as possible to develop the designs of the project.
Despite all political, fin-ancial and regulatory challenges behind the railway project, getting government approval and consensus remains the most immediate obstacle to progress on the project.
Diesel-powered trains operating at speeds of up to 200km/h would carry passengers and freight between the six states.
By the time the project is completed, the railway will connect six countries, five capital cities and two seas and cross three deserts, two waterways and a mountain range. The project also includes bridges, causeways, tunnels and cutting more than 21km long.
On the other side, the rail network is a good opportunity for business, travellers and traders. It will be an alternative to air, road and sea routes providing growing economic interdependence.
The challenging engineering project will start in the north at Kuwait’s border with Iraq and head south through Kuwait City, across the Dibdibah plain and into Saudi Arabia.
The route will then follow the Gulf coast to the rail head of the kingdom at Ras Al Zour, Jubail Industrial city and Dammam, the eastern terminus of Saudi Arabia’s only functioning railway, now almost 60 years old.
From there, the project will cross via a causeway the 28km of the Gulf that separate Saudi Arabia from Bahrain, and pass through Manama to another causeway — this time 40km to Ras Eshareg on the northwest coast of Qatar. The railway will then head south through the Qatari peninsula to Doha, new Doha port, the industrial city of Messaieed and into Saudi Arabia.
At the border town of Al Ghuwaifat, it will enter the UAE, pass through the oil and chemical centre at Ruwais and then to Al Ain before crossing the border with Oman to Sohar Industrial Port and finally its southern terminus at Barka.
The rail project will move to the third stage of developing phase where tenders would be invited from specialised consultancy firms in order to start the engineering.
Mohammad Bin Obaid Al Mazroui, GCC assistant secretary-general for economic affairs, told Gulf News that six companies would be shortlisted to carry out the railway project.
The six GCC countries will be responsible for developing their sections of the rail line independently. However, the companies chosen to execute the project on their territory should all abide by unified standards and specifications.
The second phase of the project has been finalised and report will be submitted in the meeting that the project is feasible and ready to invite bids, he added.
Financially feasible
“The project is commercially and financially feasible. Engineering designs have been submitted and the final report will be submitted to the GCC members next week.”
He remarked that the latest detailed study of the project is not much different from the preliminary one. Minor changes have been done to the rail passes and operation process.
The coming GCC meeting will discuss the feasibility study of the railway project and integrity between the member states in the transport field to go ahead with the project to phase three — construction network — Al Mazroui says.
According to the latest study, the cost of the project will be in excess of $30 billion (Dh110 billion), he added. “This project will alleviate much of the financial and logistical burden of land-to-sea travel,” he said. “The only challenge we are facing is in the inconsistent coordination between the Gulf countries and the varied operation date of the rail project,” Al Mazroui added.
He hoped to get the project up and running by 2017.
Details
rail Network
n Location: Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, UAE
n Length: 2,117 km
n The GCC technical committee plans to build a railway network project in the GCC
n The purpose of the project is to link the six GCC countries together running from Kuwait to Oman
n In 2004, a preliminary study was carried by Parsons Brinckerhoff and global Investment House and proposed two routes for the network
n The first route will be running Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain over Qatar, crossing the relevant stretches of water by bridge and continuing to UAE and Oman
n The second will stretch from Kuwait to Saudi Arabia before passing through UAE and ending in Oman
n The consortium of Systra, Khatib and Alami, and Canrail is the project consultants and the world bank will be advising on the tendering process
n GCC members declared that the project is commercially and financially feasible
n The engineering design briefs were made to be submitted for construction approval
The project is commercially and financially feasible. Engineering designs have been submitted and the final report would be submitted to the GCC members next week.”
Mohammad Bin Obaid Al Mazroui
GCC assistant secretary-general for economic affairs
By Zaher Bitar?Staff Reporter
© Gulf News 2010. All rights reserved.
Gulf rail network awaits approval
Wednesday, Dec 01, 2010
Gulf News
Project likely to BE COMPLETEd BY 2017
Dubai A long train journey to exotic destinations across the Gulf countries would be possible if final permission is granted to the GCC railway project at the Abu Dhabi summit of the GCC.
The much-talked about 2,117km rail network, starting in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, is likely to be completed by 2017 to unite the Gulf.
The GCC railway is the most ambitious project attempted in the region. It would change the transportation pattern in the GCC. Train services across the six GCC states will facilitate movement and travel of GCC citizens as well as expatriates and boost regional trade.
Once the green light is given, the massive rail project will go ahead to the network construction phase and tenders could be called as early as possible to develop the designs of the project.
Obstacle remains
Despite all political, fin-ancial and regulatory challenges behind the railway project, getting government approval and consensus remains the most immediate obstacle to progress on the project.
Diesel-powered trains operating at speeds of up to 200km/h would carry passengers and freight between the six states.
By the time the project is completed, the railway will connect six countries, five capital cities and two seas and cross three deserts, two waterways and a mountain range. The project also includes bridges, causeways, tunnels and cutting more than 21km long.
On the other side, the rail network is a good opportunity for business, travellers and traders. It will be an alternative to air, road and sea routes providing growing economic interdependence.
The challenging engineering project will start in the north at Kuwait’s border with Iraq and head south through Kuwait City, across the Dibdibah plain and into Saudi Arabia.
The route will then follow the Gulf coast to the rail head of the kingdom at Ras Al Zour, Jubail Industrial city and Dammam, the eastern terminus of Saudi Arabia’s only functioning railway, now almost 60 years old.
From there, the project will cross via a causeway the 28km of the Gulf that separate Saudi Arabia from Bahrain, and pass through Manama to another causeway — this time 40km to Ras Eshareg on the northwest coast of Qatar. The railway will then head south through the Qatari peninsula to Doha, new Doha port, the industrial city of Messaieed and into Saudi Arabia.
At the border town of Al Ghuwaifat, it will enter the UAE, pass through the oil and chemical centre at Ruwais and then to Al Ain before crossing the border with Oman to Sohar Industrial Port and finally its southern terminus at Barka.
The rail project will move to the third stage of developing phase where tenders would be invited from specialised consultancy firms in order to start the engineering.
Mohammad Bin Obaid Al Mazroui, GCC assistant secretary-general for economic affairs, told Gulf News that six companies would be shortlisted to carry out the railway project.
The six GCC countries will be responsible for developing their sections of the rail line independently. However, the companies chosen to execute the project on their territory should all abide by unified standards and specifications.
The second phase of the project has been finalised and report will be submitted in the meeting that the project is feasible and ready to invite bids, he added.
Financially feasible
“The project is commercially and financially feasible. Engineering designs have been submitted and the final report will be submitted to the GCC members next week.”
He remarked that the latest detailed study of the project is not much different from the preliminary one. Minor changes have been done to the rail passes and operation process.
The coming GCC meeting will discuss the feasibility study of the railway project and integrity between the member states in the transport field to go ahead with the project to phase three — construction network — Al Mazroui says.
According to the latest study, the cost of the project will be in excess of $30 billion (Dh110 billion), he added. “This project will alleviate much of the financial and logistical burden of land-to-sea travel,” he said. “The only challenge we are facing is in the inconsistent coordination between the Gulf countries and the varied operation date of the rail project,” Al Mazroui added.
He hoped to get the project up and running by 2017.
Details
rail Network
n Location: Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, UAE
n Length: 2,117 km
n The GCC technical committee plans to build a railway network project in the GCC
n The purpose of the project is to link the six GCC countries together running from Kuwait to Oman
n In 2004, a preliminary study was carried by Parsons Brinckerhoff and global Investment House and proposed two routes for the network
n The first route will be running Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain over Qatar, crossing the relevant stretches of water by bridge and continuing to UAE and Oman
n The second will stretch from Kuwait to Saudi Arabia before passing through UAE and ending in Oman
n The consortium of Systra, Khatib and Alami, and Canrail is the project consultants and the world bank will be advising on the tendering process
n GCC members declared that the project is commercially and financially feasible
n The engineering design briefs were made to be submitted for construction approval
The project is commercially and financially feasible. Engineering designs have been submitted and the final report would be submitted to the GCC members next week.”
Mohammad Bin Obaid Al Mazroui
GCC assistant secretary-general for economic affairs
By Zaher Bitar?Staff Reporter
© Gulf News 2010. All rights reserved.
Zawya Comment Policy
-
Zawya encourages you to add a comment to this discussion. You agree that when you add content to this discussion your comments will not:
1.1 Contain any material which is libelous or defamatory of any person, is obscene, offensive, hateful or inflammatory or causes damage to the reputation of any person or organisation.
1.2 Promote sexually explicit material, violence, discrimination based on race, sex, religion, nationality, disability, sexual orientation or age or any illegal activity.
1.3 Be made in breach of any legal duty owed to a third party, such as a contractual duty or a duty of confidence.
1.4 Be threatening, abuse or invade another's privacy, or cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety.
1.5 Be used to impersonate any person, to misrepresent your identity or affiliation with any person, or be likely to deceive any person.
1.6 Give the impression that they represent Zawya.
1.7 Advocate, promote or assist any unlawful act such as (by way of example only) copyright infringement or computer misuse. - The content posted on www.zawya.com is created by members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of Zawya. Zawya reserves the right to review all comments prior to posting and edit or delete any contribution, but Zawya is not responsible for and can not be held liable for any content posted by members of the public on www.zawya.com.
- Zawya is not responsible for the availability or content of any third party sites that are accessible through www.zawya.com. Any links to third party websites from www.zawya.com do not amount to any endorsement of that site by Zawya and any use of that site by you is at your own risk.
- By submitting your comment, you hereby give Zawya the right, but not the obligation, to post, air, edit, exhibit, telecast, webcast, re-use, publish, reproduce, use, license, print, distribute or otherwise use your comments worldwide, in perpetuity.
Copyright © 2012 Zawya Ltd. All rights reserved. |
provided by www.zawya.com |



Post Your Comment