Home General Kenya: Next Railway Phase to Be Launched as China Cuts Funding

Kenya: Next Railway Phase to Be Launched as China Cuts Funding

by kenya-tribune
12 views

The government plans to launch an expensive railway line that ends in the middle of nowhere after the Chinese government pulled the plug on funding for the next phase.

Transport Cabinet Secretary James Macharia said the government will launch four infrastructure projects on Wednesday, among them the double-decker Nairobi express highway, phase two of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) line to Suswa, a water project in Kimuka and an Inland Container Depot terminal in Maai Mahiu.

Details of the launch being organised by the Presidential Delivery Unit (PDU) have been highly guarded, a big departure from the glamour that came with the launch of the Mombasa-Nairobi line.

SUSWA STATION

Mr Macharia said that after the launch of the express highway that will connect Cabanas to Westlands, President Uhuru Kenyatta will go to the SGR Nairobi station before heading to Ongata Rongai, Ngong and Maai Mahiu. He will later commission the Suswa station.

“We shall first launch the passenger service and the freight one will come after two months,” he said in an interview with the Nation.

The phase extending the line from Nairobi to Naivasha is estimated to have cost Sh150 billion. However, the entire line has not been completed.

The passenger line expected to start operations today will ferry travellers to only four of the 12 stations — Ongata Rongai, Ngong, Maai Mahiu and Suswa.

The Nation has learnt that even the Chinese contractors who build the line are also groping in the dark, with a source familiar with the project saying they had been told that “their presence may not really be required”.

WILDERNESS

In what is set to be one of the biggest challenges to face the line, the government is staring at a line that ends in the wilderness, kilometres away from any major town or population that could have fully utilised the line.

The lack of enough volumes of cargo has also made things worse for the line. This has forced the government to start with the passenger line, and shelve the cargo side to a later date. This is the opposite of what happened with the Mombasa-Nairobi line where the cargo line started operations months before the official launch.

A passenger line, the world over, cannot operate profitably without being subsidised by the cargo side of the business. It was hoped that the Naivasha special economic zone would open up the region and bring in new demand for cargo.

But this is yet to be actualised. The long-drawn-out fight over delays in compensation for land between landowners and the government also saw the project suffer massive delays.