Bangkok Post

EEC high-speed railway to steer clear of Rayong on safety fears

- CHATRUDEE THEPARAT WICHIT CHANTANUSO­RNSIRI

The government has altered the high-speed railway linking three airports, one of the key infrastruc­ture projects of the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC), to terminate at U-tapao airport instead of the inner city of Rayong out of safety concerns and to speed developmen­t.

According to Kanit Sangsubhan, secretaryg­eneral of the EEC Office, the government is concerned about passenger safety in the event of an accident at Map Ta Phut industrial estate, through which the railway was envisioned to run before ending at Rayong.

Map Ta Phut lies east of U-tapao and west of Rayong on the Eastern Seaboard.

“The government through the EEC Committee agreed to change the last station of the route to U-tapao airport instead of Rayong,” Mr Kanit told the Bangkok Post. “If the rail is to pass through the Map Ta Phut industrial estate as originally planned, delay of the project is likely because of the requiremen­t to conduct an environmen­tal impact assessment again.”

The Bangkok-Rayong high-speed project was designed to run in the first phase through four sections: Bang Sue-Don Mueang, Bang Sue-Phaya Thai, Phaya Thai-Suvarnabhu­mi airport link and Suvarnabhu­mi-U-tapao airport.

The project was earlier to have the terms of reference issued next month, with bidding likely over the next 3-4 months.

According to Mr Kanit, the high-speed railway is one of the vital developmen­ts to build investor confidence. Others include the U-tapao airport expansion and the EEC law.

The EEC committee earlier this month approved 168 infrastruc­ture developmen­t projects worth 989 billion baht for the EEC flagship scheme. The infrastruc­ture developmen­t plan will come in three phases: urgent, intermedia­te and long term.

The urgent phase, during 2017-18, is intended to lure both domestic and foreign investment to the EEC; the intermedia­te phase, during 2019-21, focuses on transport developmen­t; and the third phase, from 2022 onwards, aims to create sustainabl­e developmen­t and bolster the infrastruc­ture network to link neighbouri­ng countries.

Of total EEC infrastruc­ture investment, state spending will account for 30%, public-private partnershi­ps 59%, state-owned enterprise­s 10% and the Royal Thai Army 1%.

Terms of reference for developmen­t projects are scheduled to be issued in the first half, with investment in each likely to be made available this year.

The draft EEC law was approved by the National Legislativ­e Assembly last week and is expected to be formally implemente­d this month or next after winning royal endorsemen­t.

The EEC law, once enforced, is aimed at building investor confidence.

In related news, the latest EEC Committee meeting also approved a 200-million-baht budget for the State Railway of Thailand to conduct a feasibilit­y study of the second phase of the Bangkok-Rayong high-speed rail to link Chanthabur­i and Trat.

The extension will also potentiall­y link to China via Cambodia and Vietnam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand