Egypt high-speed trains to connect Red Sea, Mediterranean
AFP | New Administrative Capital
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Workers have started laying tracks in the desert east of Cairo for Egypt’s first high-speed train, which will link the Red Sea and the Mediterranean in the latest attempt to modernise transport in the vast country.
Described by transport minister Kamel al-Wazir as a “new Suez Canal on rails”, the project is slated to be completed in 2028, and will carry passengers and cargo the 660-kilometre (410-mile) distance in as little as three hours.
The Green Line, as it is known, is the latest of a long list of megaprojects undertaken by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s government in the past decade -- the crowning jewel of which is a still sparsely populated $58 billion New Administrative Capital east of Cairo.
In 2021, Egypt signed a $4.5 billion contract with a consortium that includes German company Siemens to establish the Green Line, which will form the first of three highspeed tracks across the country.
Authorities hope the nearly 2,000 kilometre-network will carry 1.5 million passengers per day.
Egypt’s existing train network -- used by a million people every day -- is plagued by infrastructure and maintenance problems that caused nearly 200 accidents last year, according to official figures.
The Green Line will run across the country’s north, from Ain Sokhna on the Red Sea to Marsa Matrouh on the Mediterranean, crossing two Cairo satellite cities -- the New Administrative Capital to the east, and to the west 6th of October City, home to Egypt’s only dry port.
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