Bangkok Post

Thai-Sino hi-speed rail work could start as early as August

SRT to enter talks with govt on finances

- AMORNRAT MAHITTHIRO­OK

The cabinet will be asked to approve the Thai-Chinese high-speed railway project, linking Bangkok and Nakhon Ratchasima, next month, kickstarti­ng its constructi­on as soon as August this year.

Once the cabinet approves it, in July the State Railway of Thailand (SRT) will hire China to design the 252.5km rail track and subsequent­ly call bidding for the 179-billion-baht project, Transport Minister Arkhom Termpittay­apaisith said yesterday after the 18th meeting of a ThaiSino panel in Bangkok.

The meeting, joined by Wang Xiaotao, vice-chairman of China’s National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, concluded “almost all of details” of the joint developmen­t, the minister said.

The Bangkok-Nakhon Ratchasima route is part of a scheme which will, upon its completion, be extended with a 354km rail line from Nakhon Ratchasima to Nong Khai, which borders Laos.

Looking closer at the Bangkok-Nakhon Ratchasima project, the SRT has agreed to divide it into four sections.

Mr Arkhom said it has finished drafting the terms of reference of the first 3.5km section linking Klang Dong and Pang Asok in Nakhon Ratchasima’s Pak Chong district.

The SRT expects to call bidding for this section between July and August, he said.

Another three sections are an 11km route from Pak Chong to Sikhiu district; a 119km section between Nakhon Ratchasima and Saraburi’s Kaeng Khoi district; and the 119km from Kaeng Khoi to Bangkok.

Chinese engineers and architects are required to sit an exam to obtain local profession­al licences before they can start work here, which is causing the Chinese concern.

The Council of Engineers and the Architect Council of Thailand will help the SRT deal with the issue, Mr Arkhom said.

His ministry is also preparing to talk to the Budget Bureau and the Finance Ministry about financial issues concerning the project.

It is possible the SRT will ask the government to finance the project or seek loans from domestic financial institutio­ns.

Mr Arkhom said Thailand will only borrow money from its Chinese counterpar­t for the purchase of trains and the signalling system under the project.

In another developmen­t, more middle-sized contractor­s have joined 38 firms to buy tender document packages for a double-track rail route connecting Hua Hin and Prachuap Khiri Khan, acting SRT governor Anon Luangborib­oon said yesterday.

Their participat­ion is sought by the government for the sake of fairer competitio­n in bidding after the original terms of reference for five dual-track railway projects, including the 7.3-billion-baht Hua Hin-Prachuap Khiri Khan section, were criticised for barring small- and mediumsize­d tenders.

The original terms, with five contracts for five rail routes, was later scrapped by the “superboard” for state procuremen­ts, and replaced with a new one which divides the projects into 13 contracts with lower constructi­on value.

This has made the bidding more accessible for smaller constructi­on companies.

The number of participat­ing companies has increased from 31 in a previous bidding process to 38, Mr Anon said after the SRT closed sales on its bidding envelopes on Monday.

The agency earlier set Feb 20 for announcing a list of qualified bidders for the five projects, but that was delayed, following a complaint that the original terms of reference were drafted to favour constructi­on giants.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand