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In five years, Armenia, Iran to be connected by rail

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  • In five years, Armenia, Iran to be connected by rail

    The Armenian Reporter
    In five years, Armenia, Iran to be connected by rail
    lf this ambitious initiative materializes, Armenia could have a passage through the ports of the Persian Gulf
    by Tatul Hakobyan

    Published: Friday April 10, 2009
    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-04-10-in-f ive-years-armenia-iran-to-be-connected-by-rail

    Armenia's and Nagorno-Karabakh's railways. The borders with Turkey and
    Azerbaijan are closed. The only operating international rail link is
    with Georgia. Armenian Reporter map / © 2009 Armenian Reporter
    LLC

    Yerevan - High-ranking officials from Armenia and Iran are giving
    assurances that in five years' time there will be a railroad linking
    the two countries. According to preliminary calculations, the railroad
    will stretch for approximately 470 kilometers, with 410 of those on
    Armenian territory. The total cost of this undertaking is expected to
    run about $1.2 billion.

    An agreement will be signed by Armenia and Iran sometime this month
    when President Serge Sargsian is expected to be in Tehran for an
    official visit. On April 3 Armenia's minister of transportation,
    Gurgen Sargsian, and Iran's transport and communications minister,
    Hamid Behbahani, signed a memorandum of understanding in this regard.

    Armenia, which is currently under blockade from the west by Turkey and
    from the east by Azerbaijan, had a rail link with Iran during the
    Soviet era. The line began in Yerevan and continued along the banks of
    the Araks River, through Nakhichevan in the Azerbaijani republic,
    stretching all the way to Julfa. From there the railroad cut across
    the Araks River by bridge to Jolfa station in Iran. From there was
    connected to the Iranian railroad grid. This was the flattest and
    shortest route: 200 km from Yerevan to the Iranian border.

    Mountainous terrain
    With passage through Nakhichevan blocked, the new rail link will have
    to be built across high mountain ranges - through the provinces of
    Vayots Dzor and Syunik. The exact route through Armenian territory has
    not yet been mapped out. At a press conference with his Iranian
    counterpart, Mr. Gurgen Sargsian said it would be preferable to have
    the railroad run from the basin of Sevan toward Jermuk. Built during
    the Soviet era, there is today a working railroad from Yerevan all the
    way to the western basin of Sevan, the city of Vardenis. The portion
    of the railroad to be built on Iranian territory must run to the city
    of Marand.

    Ministers Sargsian and Behbahani said that the railroad will be built
    in three stages. In the first stage, technical and financial studies
    will be carried out. This stage will require three months. The second
    stage will be determining the route of the railroad and the drafting
    of maps. The third stage will involve the actual construction. The
    ministers foresee that this project will take up to five years to
    complete. The sides expect to secure financing for this project
    through large banks. "Negotiations for financing have already begun
    with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank," Minister Sargsian
    said.

    If the construction of this ambitious railroad becomes a reality, then
    Armenia will not only be connected to its neighbor Iran through a rail
    link, but will be able to have transportation routes all the way to
    the Persian Gulf and through this have routes to neighboring regions
    and states in Central Asia, the Middle East, India, and China.

    Armenia's railroads belong to a Russian company. The full management
    of Armenia's railroad, lately renamed the South Caucasian Railway, was
    given to Russian Railways for a period of 30 years. Since 2001 the
    Armenian railroad has been a profitable operation, primarily
    transporting cargo from Armenia to Georgia all the way to the Black
    Sea ports of Batumi and Poti and back.

    Russian Railways promised to invest $570 million in Armenia's
    railways. It has already stated, however, that it will not finance the
    Armenia-Iran initiative. The Russians will use Azerbaijan's territory
    for their railway communication with Iran.

    A geopolitically significant project
    Abel Aghabegians, a well-known economist and academician said last
    October that the fundamental issue surrounding the construction of the
    Armenia-Iran railroad would be whether the sides would be able to
    guarantee the required amount of cargo transport to justify the
    cost. He suggested that perhaps it would have preferable to renovate
    and shorten the distance of the Armenia-Iran automobile highway by
    building a few tunnels at a fraction of the cost. Mr. Aghabegians said
    that the cost of building this railroad could skyrocket to $2 billion
    because it would have to be built across treacherous territory. He
    hinted that perhaps the geopolitical significance of the Armenia-Iran
    railroad outweighs its economic benefits.

    During the Soviet era, Armenia had several rail links with
    Azerbaijn. Cargo and passenger trains operated between Yerevan and
    Baku (this route passed along the banks of the Araks River all the way
    to Julfa, then back through Armenian territory at Meghri, and back
    once again into Azerbaijan) and Ijevan to Baku. The Yerevan-Kapan line
    also passed through the territories of Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan. The
    Yerevan-Baku and the Ichevan-Baku lines carried 80 percent of
    Armenia's cargo.

    During that period, Armenia also had rail links with Turkey at the
    Gyumri-Kars line, which like the other rail links to Azerbaijan, are
    no longer in operation because of the 20-year-old blockade. The
    Yerevan - - - Tabriz rail line has also been under blockade
    because a portion of that line passes through Nakhichevan. For the
    past 17 years, Armenia also hasn't had rail connection with Russia
    because a portion of that rail line passes through separatist Abkhazia
    in Georgia. That rail line, which is known as the Abkhazian railroad,
    has been under blockade by the Georgians since 1992.
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