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Chinese-built railways put Ethiopia on track to meet 2025 development goals

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For Tedela Chala, a supermarket worker in Addis Ababa, going to work is no longer the nightmare it used to be in the past, when traffic jams were an integral part of the chaotic city.

A labourer walks along a Metro-line construction in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa February 7, 2015. REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri

“(Now) it takes only 10 minutes to reach my workplace,” the 37-year-old said, describing his fast, cheap and reliable commute on the light railway, the first in sub-Saharan Africa.

Today, the four million residents of the capital rely on the Addis Ababa Light Rail, the 475-million-U.S.-dollar project built with Chinese technology and currently operated by Chinese experts.

The light rail and another Chinese-built and financed transport project, the Ethiopia-Djibouti Standard Gauge Rail, are flagship infrastructure projects representing the socioeconomic importance of Chinese engagements in one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies.

The two railways also showcase the transformation of Ethiopia’s infrastructure, eventually providing convenient transportation all the way to its neighboring Djibouti.

Map of the Addis Ababa Light Rail. (By Maximilian Dörrbecker (Chumwa) Wikimedia Commons)

The 34.25-km light railway, with 39 stations across the city, was built by China Railway Engineering Corporation, which currently operates it together with the Shenzhen Metro Group, another Chinese company.

Beginning operation two years ago, the light rail currently serves an average 101,000 passengers daily, with the number sometimes leaping to 185,000.

The Ethiopia-Djibouti Standard Gauge Rail is providing both passenger and freight transportation between Ethiopia and Red Sea nation Djibouti.

Ethiopia, a landlocked country, heavily relies on the seaports of Djibouti with 95 percent of its import and export commodities presently transported via the Port of Djibouti.

The Ethiopia-Djibouti train line in Addis Ababa. The 750 kilometre railway, built by two Chinese companies, links Addis Ababa to the Red Sea port city of Djibouti in about 10 hours. AFP PHOTO | ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER

The 752-km transnational railway, East Africa’s first electrified railway, is also expected to ease congestion at the long-serving Port of Djibouti as well as expand Ethiopia’s exports and international trading.

According to Hu Shaode, deputy chief financial officer of Djibouti Port Co., the congestion at the port is easing as containers can be transported to Ethiopia via the railway in less than 10 hours.

Jointly constructed and operated by two Chinese companies — the state-owned China Railway Group Ltd. and China Civil Engineering Construction Corp. — the railway has transported some 30,000 passengers and more than 11,000 containers of various types in its four months of operations.

As Ethiopia ambitiously strives to become the hub of Africa’s light manufacturing industries with a lower-middle income status by 2025, the government is also building an economic belt along the railway. The industrial parks built in the belt will be an economic game changer for Ethiopia, turning the railway into a development corridor.

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