Private investor to fund railway project as Kenya abandons Chinese money

Image result for Old railway kenya

Kenya will spend $210 million (Ksh.21.3billion) in her plan to modernize the old railway line to Uganda.

The funding for the project is expected from an unidentified private backer rather than building another modern one with Chinese money.

Related image

The development of Kenya’s railways has been part of China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative, a multi-billion dollar series of infrastructure projects upgrading land and maritime trade routes between China and Europe, Asia and Africa.

Image result for Old railway kenya

“We need to make sure that when we commission the SGR in August, we have connectivity to Uganda from the SGR so we have to rehabilitate that line to make sure it is properly functional,” Kenyan transport minister James Macharia told Reuters, adding that the work will take a year to complete.

Image result for Old railway kenya

Macharia said that spending $150 million (Ksh.15billion) to rehabilitate a decades-old line from Malaba on the border with Uganda and using the rest to build another short track connecting the SGR at Naivasha would be a quicker option than building another SGR.

Image result for Old railway kenya

“It is much faster to rehabilitate because the (Naivasha-Malaba) SGR would take three to four years,” Macharia said, without commenting on the potential loan that fell through.

Image result for Old railway kenya

“Eventually we will do the SGR anyway but for the time being it is good to have something which is working,” the minister said, adding that the funding will come from a private firm which will recoup its investments by operating the line.

“We have got a private sector partner who will do this work. And then for the recovery we have a PPP (Public Private Partnership) arrangement with them,” he said.

Image result for Old railway kenya

Kenya opened a modern railway linking the port of Mombasa with the capital Nairobi in 2017 at a cost of $3.2 billion (Ksh.323.9billion).

This was then linked with another new line, costing $1.5 billion (Ksh.151.7billion) and also funded by Chinese loans, to Naivasha in the Rift Valley.

Related image

The Nairobi-Naivasha standard gauge rail (SGR) line, will be opened in August but does not yet extend to Uganda.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *