Mozambique Ports and Railways
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Mozambique Ports and Railways or Portos E Caminhos De Ferro De Mocambique (CFM) is the parastatal authority that oversees the railway system of Mozambique and its connected ports. The rail system is composed of a total of 2,983 km rail of the 1.067 m gauge that is compatible with neighboring rail systems. In addition there is a 140 km line of 0.762 m . [1] The railway system developed over more than a century from three different ports at the Indian Ocean that serve as terminals for separate lines to the hinterland. The railroads were major targets during the Mozambican Civil War, were sabotaged by RENAMO, and are being rehabilitated. Management has been largely outsourced. At this time there is no directly interconnecting rail service between the three lines. Each line has its own development corridor.
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[edit] Nacala railroad / CFM Norte
Nacala is the terminal of the Nacala Railway, the most recent addition to the railway system. It connects the Nacala Development Corridor and links to the Central East African Railway (CEAR) of Malawi. The railway system is managed by the Railroad Development Corporation. With further development the system may link up to the Beira railroad and to Zambia Railways.
[edit] Beira railroad / CFM Centre
Beira is the terminal of the Beira railroad, the oldest railway system of Mozambique. Its Machipanda line goes to Harare (formerly Salisbury) and was opened in 1899 as link to then Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, and its transits. The Sena line of the Beira railroad connects to the coal fields of Moatize with the potential to link to the railway of Malawi as well as to Zambia. As the Beira Railroad Corporation (CCFB) the Beira railway is leased from CFM to the Indian RITES Ltd. and IRCON International consortium.
[edit] Maputo railroad / CFM Sul
Maputo, formerly Lourenço Marques, and Matola are the terminals of the Maputo line that links to northeastern part of South Africa. As the Ressano Garcia Railway Company the Maputo line is managed by the NLBP (New Limpopo Bridge Project Investments) together with Spoornet and CPM with the aim to rehabilitate and operate the line to the border of South Africa. [2] In SA the link goes to Komatipoort and further to Johannesburg. The Maputo line has also links to Swazi Rail and the National Railways of Zimbabwe.
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