Tata Steel wins major Saudi rails contract
London, August 12, 2013
India's Tata Steel has won an order to manufacture 60,000 tonnes of high-quality rail for a new high-speed line linking the two holy cities of Makkah and Madinah in Saudi Arabia.
The new railway will allow millions of pilgrims to cross the 444 km between the two cities at speeds of 320 kmh. The line will cross the desert, withstanding temperatures ranging from freezing to 50 deg C, as well as sandstorms, flash flooding and shifting dunes, said a statement.
Gérard Glas, rail sector head for Tata Steel, said: “This is a prestigious project which will see the holy cities being linked by rail for the first time.
“Tata Steel is delighted to be contributing to this high-speed line, which will have to overcome some major challenges presented by building a high-capacity rail line across some of the most extreme terrain in the world.”
Steel for the project will be made at Tata Steel’s Scunthorpe plant before being rolled into rail in lengths of 25m both there and at the company’s plant in Hayange, Northern France.
Work on producing the rail will start at the end of this year and is expected to continue throughout 2014.
Tata Steel rail has already been used successfully in Brazil and Mauritania, it said.
Last year, the Saudi Railways Organization awarded the contract for the final phase of completing, running and maintaining the Haramain High-Speed Rail Project to a group of Spanish infrastructure, construction and technology companies.
Haramain means ‘two holy places’ in Arabic. The new line is expected to carry around 160,000 people a day — and even more during the Haj pilgrimage. They will be transported on a fleet of 35, new, high-speed trains.
The project started in 2009, with an estimated cost of more than €12 billion. The new rail line is set to open to the public in late 2014 or early 2015.
Besides the two holy cities, the line will have three other stops, two in Jeddah for commuters and one in Saudi Arabia’s new King Abdullah Economic City, a residential, industrial and commercial macro-complex that is still being built. - TradeArabia News Service