Kenya Railways is finalising key
studies that will inform relocation
and investment decisions on the
planned extension of the Standard
Gauge Railway line from Naivasha
to Malaba via Kisumu, management has said.
In an exclusive interview with
the Star, managing director Philip
Mainga yesterday said the corporation, through a consultant, has
completed the relocation action
plan study after identifying the
corridor for the construction of
the railway line, with a final report expected to be ready by end
of this month.
This will be handed over to the
National Land Commission, which
will then move ahead with the relocation and compensation programme.
The railway line will run
through Narok, Bomet, Nyamira,
Kisumu and finally Busia county.
An Environmental and Social Impact study that assesses potential impacts and mitigation measures in
consultation with Project-Affected
Persons (PAPs) is also expected to
be ready by April.
According to Mainga, Kenya
Railways Corporation has also
commissioned a third study on logistic hubs along the railway line
with a key focus on value addition,
in a move expected to promote industrilisation.
“We have identified different
areas in Narok, Bomet, Nyamira,
Kisumu, Vihiga and Busia which
will have economic zones, value
addition for tea, coffee, fish, horticultural crops among other produces as we look at economic gains
including increasing the country’s
exports,” Mainga said, with all
reports expected to ready by end
of April.
The latest developments are major boosts to the development as the
government, through the Transport
and Treasury ministries, continues
to engage investors on funding of
the project which is expected to
commence in the second half of this year.
The 475-kilometre line SGR
phase 2B (Naivasha-Kisumu) and
2C (Kisumu-Malaba) is estimated
to cost about Sh648 billion.
So far, China, which was behind
the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR line,
completed in 2017 at a cost of
Sh327 billion, before being extended to Suswa (Naivasha) – Phase 2A
at a cost of 150 billion, remains
the most top choice for the Kenyan
government.
“We are also in the financing stage where the government
through Treasury and Transport
ministries are engaging to get a
solution. Soon, the government
will be giving direction, we have
done our part as directed by the
government,” Mainga said.
Kenya has over the years remained a major part of China’s Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI), an infrastructure development project that
has had a significant impact on the
country’s infrastructure development.
The Asian country has since
pledged to advance major projects
under BRI as part of its economic blueprint for 2025, which places
Kenya’s SGR extension at a strategic position even as Afristar, the
operator of SGR enters the final
phased of handing over operations
to Kenya.
“We are now at 98 per cent so by
December it will be fully a Kenyan
operation,” Mainga said.
An extension will be a major
boost not only to Kenya’s economy but the Northern Corridor
where Uganda is also expected to
develope a connection to Kampala
and further into other neighbouring countries served by the Port of
Mombasa. Currently, the SGR railway ends at Duka Moja (Naivasha).
To ensure seamless movement of
goods, SGR has connected the SGR
to the Metre Gauge Railway for
last-mile delivery to other parts of
the country and vice versa.
The SGR-MGR connection is
seen as a game changer in growing industries in the Rift Valley,
Western Kenya and Nyanza, while
boosting trade in the region that
comes with the revival of the Lake
Victoria transport network and
Kisumu Port.