
Egypt aims to integrate railways into Asia-Europe network
Egyptian authorities are working to integrate the country into a railway network connecting Asia and Europe, but a long-planned bridge that would link Saudi Arabia to its Sinai Peninsula has yet to be finalised, said the country's transport minister.
Egypt has been expanding its railways along seven separate axes, stated Kamel Al Wazir.
These include three high-speed lines that would connect Sokhna Port on the Red Sea with the Mediterranean and Alexandria in the north and with Aswan in the far south, he noted.
Israel and Iraq have likewise been spending billions of dollars on rail lines with an eye towards tapping the east-west trade. All the plans involve loading cargo onto ships for part of the journey.
'We have now completed the planning for the bridge between Egypt and Saudi Arabia and are ready to implement it at any time, whether a bridge or a tunnel,' Wazir told Reuters on the sideline of an economic conference organised by the American Chamber of Commerce in Egypt.
'But the (current) solution for connecting Egypt with Saudi Arabia and Jordan is through the Arab Bridge Maritime Company, which currently has 13 vessels that can take cargo between Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt.'
Saudi Arabia's King Salman had announced during a visit to Egypt in 2016 the idea for a bridge, which would complement the mega-city and business zone of NEOM which the Saudis are building across the Straits of Tiran.
Rail cargo would be sent to a series of ports on the Mediterranean that Egypt has been upgrading over the last decade.
The high-speed train line connecting to Egypt's south would skirt the edge of the pyramids area in the desert, while simultaneously serving the site, he added.
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