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China-built railway making inroads in Africa

By Lucie Morangi in Nairobi, Kenya | China Daily | Updated: 2019-10-18 05:00
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Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta (center) waves to passengers on Wednesday taking the new section of standard gauge railway linking Nairobi, the capital, to the resort town of Naivasha. SIMON MAINA / AFP

Kenya has extended its landmark railway project by 120 kilometers, a move that is expected to significantly help the country's and Africa's economic takeoff.

The new line, linking Nairobi, the capital, with the resort town of Naivasha, was built using Chinese technology and standards, as was the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway.

Located in northwest Kenya, the project, dubbed Phase 2A, has buoyed Kenyans' confidence that the Chinese-funded infrastructure, built at a cost of about $1.5 billion, would accelerate regional integration and boost trade at a time the continent is implementing a free-trade zone agreement.

Analysts said the infrastructure, a critical segment of the Northern Corridor project linking the port of Mombasa with the Great Lakes Region's landlocked states, shows Kenya's determination to be an infrastructure hub. That would help strengthen the regional investment environment since it would significantly lower the cost of production and improve access to markets, they said.

Nyongesa Lemmy, a senior policy analyst at the Africa Policy Institute, a Nairobi-based think tank, said the government's move to couple the modern railway with an inland container depot and a 405-hectare special economic zone buoys the region's industrialization ambitions.

Besides decongesting the port of Mombasa, the efficiency of the railway network would facilitate faster and safer transportation of freight to and from the port, Lemmy said.

"I think one of the biggest challenges investors have been facing is a reliable transport system from the hinterlands to the port. Nontariff barriers such as unscheduled roadblocks have always resulted in delays in delivery of goods and have bred corruption. I think this would be one of the immediate benefits the region would witness."

While inaugurating the railway on Wednesday, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said investments made by China in Kenya's infrastructure expansion indicate growing confidence in the country's ambitions. The government, he said, is therefore committed to developing conducive policies and a regulatory framework to further improve the investment environment.

An inland port near one of the train stations will become a distribution center in East Africa, with traders from Uganda, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo picking up goods and setting up offices there.

Kenya used to rely on a meter-gauge railway over 100 years old to Uganda as a major transportation line. The country is replacing it with a new standard gauge railway with Chinese financing of about $400 million, which would provide a seamless link to the corridor as countries in the interior start linking their modern railway infrastructure to Kenya's.

Rajneesh Bhuee, a consulting economist based in Nairobi, said the Nairobi-Naivasha project has already boosted cross-border trade.

The project, which crosses the Nairobi National Park and the Great Rift Valley, is expected to stimulate investments in manufacturing and tourism, the latter being Kenya's second-largest source of foreign exchange.

Wu Peng, China's ambassador to Kenya, said: "More businesses will benefit, more jobs will be created. Therefore, I believe the seeds of hope we sow today will definitely grow up in the near future."

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