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China’s EXIM inks $1.5bn deal for high-speed rail in Iran

China's CMC has undertaken to electrify the 926-km line between Tehran to Mashhad.

The Export-Import Bank of China (EXIM) signs a $1.5 billion deal to finance the electrification of a high-speed rail line between the Iranian cities of Tehran and Mashhad.

EXIM’s Vice President Sun Ping and CEO of the Bank of Industry and Mine Ali Ashraf Afkhami signed the documents in Tehran on Tuesday after “16 months of intensive talks”, the Iranian official said.

The Iranian bank is about to provide government guarantees for the Chinese investment. Afkhami described the contract a "major achievement after the implementation of the JCPOA some 18 months ago."

The JCPOA stands for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the nuclear accord which Iran reached with the West and other countries to have sanctions lifted on Tehran in exchange for scaling back its nuclear program. 

China National Machinery Import and Export Corporation, known as CMC, has undertaken to electrify the 926-km line from the capital to the holy city in northeast Iran in partnership with the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways (IRIR).

Iran’s holding group MAPNA is a subcontractor in the project. It has signed an agreement with Germany’s Siemens for the joint manufacture of 70 electric locomotives to be used in the route.

China Railway Group Limited (CREC) is carrying out another project worth $1.8 billion for the electrification of a high-speed rail link between the cities of Tehran, Qom and Isfahan. 

Sun said  EXIM has so far provided loans for 26 Iranian projects in the electricity, petrochemicals, non-ferrous metals, oil and gas sectors, worth $9 billion.  

Iran has announced plans to splurge up to $25 billion over the next 10 years in the modernization and expansion of its railway network.

Earlier this month, the country signed a deal worth 1.2 billion euros with Italy’s state railway company Ferrovie dello Stato (FS) to build a high-speed railway between the central cities of Arak and Qom.

Under its vision plan, Iran seeks to stretch out the nationwide railroad line to 25,000 kilometers by 2025 from under 15,000 kilometers now.

 Alstom Prima diesel locomotives on a long freight train between Tabriz and Tehran

Much of Iran's transportation is road-based marked by high accident and casualty rates. According to a 2012 report by the World Health Organization, Iran has the highest number of car accidents in the world in which more than 20,000 people are killed every year.

The country, with a population of 80 million, is also struggling to catch up with a runaway urbanization. Tehran and other major cities are aggressively developing a mass-transit system in which metro transportation plays a vital role.

One of the most spectacular railway lines exists in Iran because of its unique geography. 

Connectivity is one of the key strengths of Iran, a vast country with a territory more than 1.6 million square kilometers. It is bounded by the Caspian Sea in the north and the Persian Gulf in the south, giving it a unique position to connect the countries of Asia and Europe.

Iran is a major partner in the International North-South Transportation Corridor (INSTC) project, stretching from Bandar Abbas in the Persian Gulf to Russia, Eurasia and Europe. 

Alstom signs deal to build railroad cars in Iran

French transport company Alstom has signed a joint agreement for the construction of metro and suburban railroad cars in Iran.

The deal, signed between Alstom, the Industrial Development and Renovation Organization of Iran (IDRO) and Iranian Rail Industries Development Co, is for investment, technology transfer, production and export, and maximum use of domestic capability.

According to Iranian Minister of Industry, Mines and Trade Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh, Alstom will hold 60 percent of the project, while each of the Iranian companies will invest 20 percent. The minister did not give the value of the deal.  

The aim of the partnership is to develop a railroad car construction factory in the city of Abhar, 227 km to the west of Iran, where 1,000 wagon units are anticipated to be built, he said.

Iran itself has a sizable capacity for construction of railroad cars. Nematzadeh has already said Iran can produce five passenger train coaches and 3,000 freight wagons as well as 50-60 locomotives a year.

“Given the Alstom company’s major share in this contract, we also demand the export of wagons abroad, in addition to domestic supply," Nematzadeh said Monday.

“According to the agreement, the latest technology in the world will be coming to the country and in the first part of the cooperation, 2,000 metro rail carriages will be provided,” he added.

Commuters in a train carriage in a railway subway system beneath Tehran

Nematzadeh said separate agreements will be signed with other companies for supply of components, including engines, rails, brakes and electrical systems.

“Due to the high domestic demand, the products are currently in order to supply the country and then export,” he said.

In July 2015, France’s architectural firm AREP signed a $7 million deal for redevelopment of three main railway stations in Iran.

Currently, Tehran has about 190 km of metro rail which ferries 3 million commuters every day. The network is being expanded and expected to reach 400 km when it is complete.


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