China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Rail blueprint boosts growth in East Africa

Replacing century-old rail line will cut hours off Nairobi-Mombasa journey and be economic boon

- By XIE SONGXIN and HOU LIQIANG in Nairobi

An overnight train ride from Nairobi to the seaside city of Mombasa can easily turn into a nightmare. It is not unusual for passengers to wake up in the morning stuck on the outskirts of the Kenyan capital.

The train, which runs every two days, is supposed to leave Nairobi at 9 pm, but often does not depart until after midnight, and a journey that should take 15 hours can stretch to more than 20 hours.

Though slow and inefficien­t, the narrow-gauge railway, built by the British 110 years ago, has been a lifeline for Kenya and other East African countries, transporti­ng passengers and goods between the two most important cities in the country.

The alternativ­e is a highway linking the two cities, but that can be just as difficult, given that it is often heavily congested.

Only a stone’s throw from the old line, work is in full swing on a new railway line, using Chinese standards and technology. That will shorten the Nairobi-Mombasa trip to four and a half hours and will bring Kenya into the 21st century.

Constructi­on of the 472-kilometer standard-gauge railway, financed by Exim Bank of China, began in October and is expected to open in 2017. The estimated cost is $3.8 billion.

The Chinese infrastruc­ture, engineerin­g and constructi­on company China Road and Bridge Corp is employing about 1,900 Chinese and more than 10,000 Kenyan engineers and skilled workers on the project. The company said it will eventually employ 2,500 Chinese engineers and 30,000 local workers.

Chen Yun,

head of the project and vice-president of China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co Ltd

The Kenyan government estimated that constructi­on of the standard-gauge railway will help the country generate 1.5 percent of its GDP and eventually enable Kenya to become a gateway of East Africa after the MombasaNai­robi section joins other sections being built or to be built in the region.

Chen Yun, head of the project and vice-president of China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co Ltd, the holding company of CRBC, said: “The opening of the railway, like the wings of a bird, will prepare East Africa and even the whole of Africa for economic takeoff.

“Once the line is open it will greatly change people’s work and lives generally,” Chen added.

The new Mombasa-Nairobi line will play a leading role in the East Africa railway network, which will link Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan and Uganda, and its value will become clearer when the East Africa railway network is completed and forms a large logistics circle in the region.

The opening of the railway, like the wings of a bird, will prepare East Africa and even the whole of Africa for economic takeoff.”

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