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Mauritania Railway

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Map of Mauritania Railway
Technical
Line length704 kilometres (437 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) (Standard)
0 km
Cansado
0 km
Nouadhibou
96 km
Boulenouar
222 km
Agueijit
255 km
Inal
318 km
Tmeimitschatt
393 km
Ben Amira
460 km
Choum
Choum Tunnel (Disused)
Mauritania–Western Sahara border
Mauritania–Western Sahara border
485 km
Char
568 km
Tuadschil
625 km
Fderîck
650 km
Zouérat
670 km
Guelb El Rhein mine
700 km
M'Haoudat mine
735 km
Storanville mine

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The Mauritania Railway is the national railway of Mauritania. Opened in 1963,[1] it consists of a single, 704-kilometre (437 mi) railway line linking the iron mining centre of Zouerate with the port of Nouadhibou, via Fderik and Choum. The state agency Société Nationale Industrielle et Minière (National Mining and Industrial Company, SNIM) controls the railway line.

Since the closure of the Choum Tunnel, a 5 km section of the railway cuts through the Polisario Front controlled part of the Western Sahara (21°21′18″N 13°00′46″W / 21.354867°N 13.012644°W / 21.354867; -13.012644)).

History

Traffic

Mauritania Railway train at the station in Nouadhibou

Trains on the railway are up to 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) in length,[2] making them among the longest and heaviest in the world. They consist of 3 or 4 diesel-electric EMD locomotives, 200 to 210 cars each carrying up to 84 tons of iron ore, and a variable number of service cars. The total traffic averages 16.6 million tons[which?] per year.

Passengers are also occasionally transported by train; these services are managed by an SNIM subsidiary, the ATTM Society (Société d'assainissement, de travaux, de transport et de maintenance). Passenger cars are sometimes attached, but more often passengers simply ride atop the ore hopper cars.

Locomotives

In October 2010, SNIM ordered a batch of six EMD SD-70ACS locomotives, with special modifications for operating in high temperatures.[3]

Glencore Xstrata

In 2014, Glencore Xstrata paid $1b to SNIM for access to that company's rail and port infrastructure. There will be branch lines to new mines at Askaf and Guelb El Aouj.

It is cheaper for Glencore to pay to share existing infrastructure, that to build its own, which would be wasteful, in a "beggar thy neighbour" way. The key factor is determining the price. [4]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Mauritania, a Nation of Moorish Nomads, Suddenly Finds Herself in 20th Century". The New York Times. January 20, 1964. last June, the 20th century elbowed its way into this Biblical picture
  2. ^ "The ore train". Société Nationale Industrielle et Minière. Retrieved December 17, 2008. [dead link]
  3. ^ "Railway Gazette: High temperature locomotives ordered from EMD". Retrieved 2010-10-30.
  4. ^ http://www.railpage.com.au/f-t11332401.htm

Further reading

  • Robinson, Neil (2009). World Rail Atlas and Historical Summary. Volume 7: North, East and Central Africa. Barnsley, UK: World Rail Atlas Ltd. ISBN 978-954-92184-3-5.