Vietnam Railways

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Vietnam Railways system
Leaving Sài Gòn Station
A section of metre-gauge line in Hanoi.
Old locomotive exhibited in Vinh railway station.
Hanoi Station
Shunting the locomotive TY6P to the other end at Trại Mát station on the Đà Lạt - Trại Mát line
A local train on a passing siding at Phù Mỹ, between Quy Nhơn and Quảng Ngãi
On board a local day train on the North-South line
Beds in passenger coaches

Vietnam Railways (Đường sắt Việt Nam) is the state-owned operator of the railway system in Vietnam. The principal route is the 1600 km single track North-South Railway line, running between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. This was built at the metre gauge in the 1880s during the French colonial rule. There are also standard gauge lines running from Hanoi to the People’s Republic of China, eventually leading to Beijing, and some mixed gauge in and around Hanoi.

Problems

Notwithstanding the poor state of the country’s road network, the railway system does not make a great contribution to the national transport infrastructure, carrying only about 0.7% of all freight. The 30 to 40-hour passenger trip between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City is undertaken by few, although visitor resorts such as Huế, Hội An, and Nha Trang lie along the route and generate some tourist traffic. Following the Sino-Vietnamese War of 1979 some travel restraints are still in place in the border region and the usage of the lines north and east of Hanoi is curtailed as a result. The Ho Chi Minh CityHanoi line is poorly maintained and the engineering infrastructure, much damaged by war, has even now received only temporary repair in many places. In addition, the center of the country is subject to violent annual flooding and bridges are often swept away, causing lengthy closures.

Projects

In 2008, the Ho Chi Minh City government approved construction of a subway rail system, eventually to comprise four lines, the first to be completed by 2013.[1]

There is a long-term plan to build a completely new standard-gauge line to connect the two main cities. New international routes to Phnom Penh and thus via Bangkok to Singapore are also under consideration. A parliamentary resolution of 2005 proposed that foreign investors be invited to invest in Vietnam Railways. On 9/11/08 the Cambodian Ministry of Transportation announced a new railway line with the total length of 257 km will connect Phnom Penh with Loc Ninh (Binh Phuoc province), Vietnam. This 550 – million – dollar project has been carefully investigated by Chinese experts and is about to be carried out in the near future. Vietnam is extending its network to Loc Ninh. In August 2010, the government announced plans to build two sections of standard-gauge railway, from Hanoi to Vinh and from Ho Chi Minh City to Nha Trang.[2]

Although on the face of things the possibility of a good return might appear small, there are precedents: the lines into China have benefited from Chinese investment and, more recently, Japanese investment was spent on the Hai Van Tunnel project, a new road tunnel alongside the north-south rail line near Da Nang.

At a more local level, the picturesque hill town and resort of Đà Lạt was once connected by a scenic little rack railway to the main north-south line at Thap Cham.[3] Although there is now little visible trace of the trackbed in the green and fertile landscape, local businesses have secured a promise of government funding for its reinstatement, to benefit tourism in the area.[4] Currently, the only railway at Đà Lạt is an 8 km remnant from the old railway connection that runs from Đà Lạt station to the nearby village of Trại Mát. This is run as a tourist attraction.

Other projects likely to receive foreign money are proposed light rail systems within Hanoi.

High speed rail plans on hold

Vietnam Railways also planned a 1,630-kilometre (1,013 mi) high-speed standard gauge[5] link from its capital Hanoi in the north to Ho Chi Minh City in the south, capable of running at 250 to 300 km/h (155 to 186 mph). It was planned to have an initial travel time of 9 hours and to make a series of improvements over time to eventually reduce the time to 5 hours. The current single track line has journey times from just under thirty hours,.[6]

The funding of the $33 billion line was to come mostly from the Vietnamese government, with the help of Japanese aid (on the understanding that Japanese firms would engineer the bulk of the project).[7] In 2010, there was an unsuccessful push to fund the project,[2] and efforts to promote the project have fallen off since then.

The timetable called for the initial construction (the 9 hour line) to be completed in 2016, and the line improvements (the 5 hour line) by 2025. At one point, the Vietnamese prime minister had set a target to complete the line by 2013.[8] Approval was delayed several times, and in May 2010, the plan was finally rejected by the government.[2]

Locomotives

# Type Number Number of Power (horsepower)
1 Czechoslovakia D12E 40 1.200
2 Belgium D18E 16 1.800
3 Romania D11H 23 1.100
4 Đổi mới D19E 80 1.950
5 GE D9E 33   900
6 GE D10E 22 1.000
7 India D13E 24 1.300
8 DH D5H 13   500
9 DFH-21 D10H 20 1.000
10 Push and pull D8E 2   800
11 TY7 D4H 77   400
12 TU8 TY8 4   180
13 TU8P TY6P 1   180
14 TY 1.435 D4HR 2   400
15 Friendship D19Er 5 1.950
16 JMD 1.435 D14E 5 1.400
17 AR 15 D20E 16 2.010

Overview

Routes

  • North-South
  • Local
  • Hanoi-Beijing

Lines

  • Hanoi-Saigon
  • Hanoi-Lao Cai
  • Hanoi-Quan Trieu
  • Hanoi-Dong Dang
  • Hanoi-Haiphong
  • Kep-Uong Bi
  • Hanoi-Thai Nguyen

Stations

  • Saigon
  • Nha Trang
  • Dieu Tri
  • Quảng Ngãi
  • Da Nang
  • Hue
  • Dong Hoi
  • Vinh
  • Haiphong
  • Hanoi
  • Dong Dang
  • Lao Cai
  • Bien Hoa
  • Bong Son
  • Duc Pho
  • Nui Thanh
  • Ta Ky
  • Tra Kieu
  • Dieu Tri

Gauges

  • 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) (2169 km)
  • 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) (standard gauge, 178 km)
  • 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) and 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) (dual gauge, 253 km)

Trackage

  • Total 3160 km
  • 506 km of siding

Fleet

Hotels

  • Hai Can Nam Hotel
  • Saigon Hotel
  • Kham Thien Hotel
  • Mat Son Hotel
  • Sam Son Hotel
  • Ha Thanh Hotel
  • Le Ninh Hotel
  • Nha Trang Hotel
  • Ca Na Hotel
  • Dat Lat Railway Hotel
  • Ky Dong Hotel
  • Hai Van Bac Hotel
  • Mua Xuan Hotel

See also

Notes

  1. Vong, M. "Vietnam to build first subway with Japanese aid". Thanh Nien News. Vietnam’s Youth Association. Retrieved 2008-10-16. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "2010-10-01". Retrieved 2010-10-12. 
  3. "A Brief History of Dalat Railroad". Viet Nam Air Force Model Aircraft of Minnesota. 2007-10-07. Retrieved 2008-03-14. 
  4. "1928 Thap Cham-Da Lat Railway returns". Vietnamnet, from official Viet Nam News agency. 2007-10-07. Archived from the original on 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2008-03-14. 
  5. "Railway plans to build 880 km express line". Viet Nam News. 2006-07-20. Retrieved 2006-07-20. 
  6. "Vietnam Railways Website (English) - Check the timetable from Ha Noi to Sai Gon (or vice versa) to see the journey times". Vietnam Railways. Retrieved 2008-05-10. 
  7. Reuters News (2006-07-20). "Vietnam to build high-speed rail with Japan aid". Retrieved 2006-07-20. 
  8. Bill Hayton (2006-07-20). "Vietnam plans new railway link". BBC News. Retrieved 2006-07-20. 

External links

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