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Ethiopia-Djibouti railway -- the Tazara railway in a new era

How wide is this carriage,never seen it before,three seats in a row?
3+2 seats a row, the lowest class in China, called hard seat, only found in <160km/h trains.



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These elements are very China.

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Great news! I hear China will train and work together with the local staff for 6 years, then transfer all operations to them. Hope everything is going well.
I know Ethiopia is a great nation, she is the only independent African nation during the colonial period. The nationa and people must have great tradition and strength.
Congratuations to both parties. :yahoo::yahoo:
 
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Ethiopia: Addis Djibouti Railway Benefits All

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OPINIONBy La Yifan

Addis Djibouti Railway will be formally put into operation.

On October 5, Addis Djibouti Railway will be formally put into operation. It is a joint effort of Ethiopia, Djibouti and China. For well over 13 months, tens of thousands technicians and workers from the three countries have worked tirelessly on the site of construction stretching 750 kilometers. It is the first standard gauge electrified railroad on the continent build with Chinese standard and technology, and certainly it will not be the last. Many stand to benefit from it.


First and foremost, it is going to contribute to the economic well being of Ethiopia and Djibouti. Ethiopia as a land-locked country will be increasingly turned into a land-linked one with transport cost significantly drop and efficiency greatly improved. The status of Djibouti as a hub of international seaport will also be enhanced. During the construction, nearly 40,000 local jobs have been created, and many of those have gained valuable skills and technics to operate sophisticated railroad machines. The expertise they gain will help their countries develop related industries in the days ahead.

Secondly, international investors across the board stand to gain from the railway. With easier access to international maritime shipping, the existing investors in Ethiopia and Djibouti, be it from Europe, USA, India, Turkey or the others, will cut down significantly their cost and timing of transport. I do recall a visit to a Turkish textile factory near Dire Dawa along the railway last year. I was told by the factory owner that he was so eager to see the running trains that he visited the construction site twice a day! He was so tired of his cargo congested on the highway.

Thirdly, the railway is a good news for all Africans on the continent. Just less than two decades, the continent has turned from a land of despair to a land of hope. It is mainly due to the hard work of Africans themselves. It is also due to so many international partners willing to fulfill the African aspirations for pulling out of poverty and bring about industrialization. Infrastructure development is the wind beneath their wings to fly high. With Addis Djibouti Railway, it not only contributes to regional wide connectivity, but also serves as a walking lab for all Africans to train their workers and make their own blue print of railway networks.

I could almost envisage the laughter and joy of the crowd at the inauguration ceremony of the railway on October 5 in Addis Ababa. It bodes especially well for Ethiopians and Djiboutians, and it bodes well for all of us, too.

The author is Chinese Ambassador to Ethiopia

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This African railway feels like in China

Djibouti-Ethiopia rail runs set for October start


http://africatimes.com/2016/09/29/djibouti-ethiopia-rail-runs-set-for-october-start/


By AT editor - 29 September 2016 at 7:49 pm

View attachment 340863

Test runs of the new railway linking Addis Ababa and Djibouti may come as early as next week, now that the $345 million project, funded primarily by China, is near completion.

Officials with Ethiopian Railway Corporation say trial service will run for three to six months on the line, beginning the first week in October, the government’s Ethiopian News Agency reports.

The electric rail system will cut travel time between Ethiopia’s landlocked capital and the Port of Doraleh, on the Gulf of Aden, from two days to less than 10 hours. It is part of an ambitious Ethiopian initiative to build 5,000 kilometers of rail to connect its fast-growing cities and their markets.

That $3 billion vision would make Ethiopia the first sub-Saharan country outside of South Africa to develop a comparable national rail network.

China’s funding of 70 percent of the Addis Ababa-Djibouti line reflects its continued investment and strategic interest in the Horn of Africa.

The railway is built by China Railway Engineering Corporation (CREC) and China Civil Engineering Construction (CCECC), and replaces a nearly 100-year-old diesel line with the efficient, environmentally friendly new trains.

View attachment 340862

Is it double track all the way?
$345 million? that's misquote.
 
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Ethiopia: Addis Djibouti Railway Benefits All

View attachment 340949 View attachment 340948

OPINIONBy La Yifan

Addis Djibouti Railway will be formally put into operation.

On October 5, Addis Djibouti Railway will be formally put into operation. It is a joint effort of Ethiopia, Djibouti and China. For well over 13 months, tens of thousands technicians and workers from the three countries have worked tirelessly on the site of construction stretching 750 kilometers. It is the first standard gauge electrified railroad on the continent build with Chinese standard and technology, and certainly it will not be the last. Many stand to benefit from it.


First and foremost, it is going to contribute to the economic well being of Ethiopia and Djibouti. Ethiopia as a land-locked country will be increasingly turned into a land-linked one with transport cost significantly drop and efficiency greatly improved. The status of Djibouti as a hub of international seaport will also be enhanced. During the construction, nearly 40,000 local jobs have been created, and many of those have gained valuable skills and technics to operate sophisticated railroad machines. The expertise they gain will help their countries develop related industries in the days ahead.

Secondly, international investors across the board stand to gain from the railway. With easier access to international maritime shipping, the existing investors in Ethiopia and Djibouti, be it from Europe, USA, India, Turkey or the others, will cut down significantly their cost and timing of transport. I do recall a visit to a Turkish textile factory near Dire Dawa along the railway last year. I was told by the factory owner that he was so eager to see the running trains that he visited the construction site twice a day! He was so tired of his cargo congested on the highway.

Thirdly, the railway is a good news for all Africans on the continent. Just less than two decades, the continent has turned from a land of despair to a land of hope. It is mainly due to the hard work of Africans themselves. It is also due to so many international partners willing to fulfill the African aspirations for pulling out of poverty and bring about industrialization. Infrastructure development is the wind beneath their wings to fly high. With Addis Djibouti Railway, it not only contributes to regional wide connectivity, but also serves as a walking lab for all Africans to train their workers and make their own blue print of railway networks.

I could almost envisage the laughter and joy of the crowd at the inauguration ceremony of the railway on October 5 in Addis Ababa. It bodes especially well for Ethiopians and Djiboutians, and it bodes well for all of us, too.

The author is Chinese Ambassador to Ethiopia

View attachment 340945
View attachment 340942 View attachment 340943 View attachment 340944

It is more than a railway project. I heard CREC also help to construct a lots of plus infrasturctures for the local people, for example dig wells, build roads, repair churches, train the operation and management skills, provide scholarship and so on...
 
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China-led railway project connects 2 African nations
2016-10-06 08:36 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

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Xu Shaoshi (center), head of the National Development and Reform Commission and special envoy representing President Xi Jinping, watches as Hailemariam Desalegn, Ethiopia's prime minister (left), and Djibouti's President Ismail Omar Guelleh (right) cut the ribbon to launch the new railway from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to the port of Djibouti on Wednesday in Addis Ababa. QIN BIN / FOR CHINA DAILY

Top leaders, dignitaries mark opening of service between Ethiopia, Djibouti port

In the 1970s, China anchored the construction of the Tazara railway linking Tanzania and Zambia — a project that greatly boosted the two countries' economies. A little more than 40 years later, a new episode of railway history was written, again with a Chinese helping hand, as East Africa's first modern electrified standard gauge railway was inaugurated on Wednesday in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The 750-kilometer railway, built by two Chinese companies and mainly financed by a Chinese bank, links Addis Ababa to the Red Sea port city of Djibouti. Designed for a speed of 120 kilometers per hour, it is expected to reduce travel time from seven days by road to about 10 hours, and provide landlocked Ethiopia with a faster access to the Djibouti port.

In a ceremony on Wednesday morning, Hailemariam Desalegn, prime minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, and his neighbor, Ismail Omar Guelleh, president of the Republic of Djibouti, cut a red ribbon officially commissioning the infrastructure that traverses both countries.

The railway was developed by two Chinese firms — China Railway Engineering Corp and China Civil Engineering Construction Corp. China Export and Import Bank loaned 70 percent of the capital.

"This train is a game-changer," said Mekonnen Getachew, CEO of the Ethiopian Railways Corp. "Ethiopia is one of the fastest growing economies in Africa. The connection to the ports (of Djibouti) will give a bounce, and our economy will grow faster."

In his keynote speech, Desalegn said the $4 billion railway project clearly showed Africa's desire and commitment to speed up the integration process.

"Ethiopia is once again in the continental map as a pioneer toward implementing modern infrastructure, courtesy of China," Desalegn said.

The Djibouti president, Guelleh, hailed the project as a symbol of friendship and integration between the two neighboring countries. He said the project was conceived in 1897 but was only made possible more than 100 years later by China.

"China has stood by us and has been instrumental in building not only our regional infrastructure but the whole of Africa," he said. "We see a prosperous future as a more integrated continent. This railway represents the new face of Africa, which is ready to take charge of its destiny."

Also present were Togo's President Faure Essozimna Gnassingbe; Xu Shaoshi, special envoy of President Xi Jinping and head of the National Development and Reform Commission; and Yuan Xingyong, vice-president of Export-Import Bank of China.

Xu hailed the railway as an achievement of cooperation and friendship, calling it a road map to the future, but said more effort should be made to develop the local labor force.

There will be a three-month test period of the line. To address a shortage of railway personnel, a massive training program is being led by China.

In Ethiopia, which hosts most of the line, about 2,000 local stewards, technicians, drivers and others are receiving training from China Railway No 2 Engineering Group, a major builder and operator of the railway.

More than 20,000 workers from Ethiopia and 5,000 from Djibouti were employed during the construction.

China is a leading builder and operator of railways worldwide. As of the end of 2015, the country had put 121,000 kilometers of rail lines into service, including 19,000 km of high-speed rail.

Xinhua and Agence France-Presse contributed to this story.
 
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