Bangkok Post

High-speed rail project delayed due to EIA review

- OM JOTIKASTHI­RA

Constructi­on work has been delayed until the middle of next month for the initial 3.5-kilometre stretch of the Thai-Chinese high-speed railway in Nakhon Ratchasima, Transport Minister Ark hom Termpittay­apa is iths aid yesterday.

The reason for the latest delay is that the project’s environmen­tal impact assessment (EIA) report is still pending approval, he said.

The EIA, the project’s seventh so far, is awaiting the green light from the Environmen­tal Impact Evaluation Bureau.

Mr Arkhom said the Ministry of Transport (MOT) and other affiliated parties have been discussing methods to speed up the approval process due to a number of delays.

The railway’s first phase will connect Bangkok to Nakhon Ratchasima, with the second phase linking Nakhon Ratchasima and Nong Khai.

The 3.5-km stretch in question will be built from Klang Dong train station to Pang Asok station in Nakhon Ratchasima.

Constructi­on will be overseen by the Department of Highways, Mr Arkhom said, with funds drawn from domestic loans requested by the State Railway of Thailand.

He said the ministry has establishe­d a project management committee comprising four sub-committees to ensure fewer delays in the future.

The subcommitt­ees will be responsibl­e for the project’ s administra­tive affairs and for setting up a research and developmen­t centre f or railway technology. They will also deal with projects for seamless transit systems connecting the railway to cities using provincial shuttle buses and other methods, as well as moves to commercial­ise nearby properties, Mr Arkhom said.

He said constructi­on of the next phases of the project would begin in the first quarter of 2018.

“While we have agreed that the Chinese representa­tives ... must send their designs to us within six months, we have requested them to do so as soon as the design work on each sub-phase is completed,” he said.

The complete Bangkok-Nong Khai route is due to open to the public by 2022. As such, one of the next targets is to build rail links with Laos, the transport minister said.

Landlocked Laos is set to launch its own high-speed railway project with China in four to five years — a 414-km line that will also pass through Luang Prabang, a World Heritage Town in Laos.

Officials from the Thai and Lao transport ministries met in September to discuss optimum connection points, said Chaiwat Thongkamko­on, director-general of the Office of Transport and Traffic Policy and Planning. He said a link could potentiall­y be made along the First Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge, which connects Nong Khai in Thailand to Vientiane.

More talks are needed to decide whether the old bridge’s walkways could be used a foundation for the new line, he said.

Any plans must be discussed with China before they can be put in motion, he added.

 ??  ?? Arkhom: Trying to speed up process
Arkhom: Trying to speed up process

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