The UAE's national rail scheme is designed primarily to improve cargo links across the seven emirates. While there are plans to run passenger trains eventually, the immediate priority is to lay trade routes that will cement the UAE's enviable position as the Gulf's most prominent trade hub.
"The railway will make a significant contribution to the economic and social development of the UAE," says Graeme Overall, head of business development at Etihad Rail. "It will connect the key areas of trade and commerce in the UAE, linking heavy industry, the ports, and the main centres of population. And as the population grows we will have a bigger role to play; indeed, we will be facilitating that growth."
UAE rail network to run 1,200km
The network will eventually run for 1,200km across the country, threading its way through all seven emirates and even linking to proposed regional lines, to Saudi Arabia via Ghweifat in the west and Oman via Al Ain in the east. The Shah-Ruwais line will be in operation as early as 2013 and will be used to transport wagons of granulated sulphur for export. When complete, the UAE-wide network will transport some 50 million tonnes of freight and 16 million passengers over the next 20 to 30 years, on freight trains running at speeds of up to 120kph, and passenger trains at speeds of up to 200kph.
"When you include Etihad Rail with Dubai's existing transport and logistics infrastructure, you get a set-up that is unrivalled in the GCC region," says H.E. Hamad Buamim, director general of the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI). "We currently have the ability to transport goods by air, sea and road, and the addition of rail will help further cement the UAE's position as the Gulf's leading trade hub."
"There are major flows of freight within the country, and this is our first priority, as well as the need which is easiest to cater for," adds Overall at Etihad Rail. "There are very large quantities of materials being moved around the country now, and they can be moved by rail very straightforwardly, without the need to penetrate urban areas."
Quality of air expected to improve
UAE residents in those urban areas might also find it a little easier to breathe once the railway is up and running. The network is expected to make an immense contribution to improving the quality of the air in the country, cutting the number of heavy goods vehicles, which dominate UAE roads today.
"Just one train can handle the freight of around 300 trucks, while generating about 20% of the fumes that those trucks would emit," says Overall.






