The National - News

Dubai Metro serves a city on the right track

▶ Providing a safe and affordable mass transit system for millions of people is no mean feat

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If a city’s lifeblood is its transport system then Dubai – whose Metro has carried more than 2 billion people since opening in 2009 – has a clean bill of health.

This milestone figure was released by Dubai Media Office on Sunday as crowds of people enjoying the long Eid Al Fitr weekend thronged the almost 90kmlong network that runs parallel to Sheikh Zayed Road. The Arabian Peninsula’s first mass transit system has become an integral part of Dubai life over the years and has served its people admirably.

The numbers speak for themselves. The Metro has maintained a punctualit­y rate of 99.7 per cent amid a growing population, the UAE’s post-Covid economic boom and a major line expansion for Expo 2020 Dubai. As conference­s, summits and events returned to the Gulf’s leading commercial and tourism centre, the Metro contribute­d to the more than 621 million journeys made on Dubai public transport in 2022 – an increase of 35 per cent on the previous year.

The Metro’s indispensa­bility is not in doubt. Its 129 trains and 53 stations contribute to a transport mix that allows those many Dubai residents without a car – and plenty who do – to access different parts of the growing city for work and leisure. It is a critical part of a complex and interlinke­d web of trams, trains, buses, marine transport and even bicycles that leaves few parts of Dubai unserved.

It is perhaps the Metro’s centrality to getting around Dubai that makes the 2-billion milestone particular­ly significan­t. Although the average daily number of Metro passengers was more than 616,000 last year, according to the Roads and Transport Authority, out of Dubai’s 119 bus lines, 35 link to Metro stations. This allows passengers – residents and visitors alike – to use the city’s Nol electronic ticketing system to effortless­ly switch from one mode of transport to another.

The Metro links Dubai Internatio­nal Airport with the rest of the city, and connects bus passengers arriving from other emirates at stations like Ibn Battuta and Al Ghubaiba. It also links up with Dubai Tram, the 14.5km network that serves Palm Jumeirah, Dubai Marina and Media City, among other destinatio­ns.

That this system has remained so advanced while staying affordable is an achievemen­t. The price of a Nol silver card single ticket for more than two zones – Dh7.50 – is significan­tly cheaper than comparable journeys in cities such as Paris, Toronto and New York.

Transport is free for senior citizens, children under 5 and people of determinat­ion, something that also speaks to how accessible Dubai is. And unlike subway systems in some other major cities, crime on the Metro is largely unheard of.

As Dubai continues to grow, its residents can be proud of their Metro – an engineerin­g feat that not only gets people from A to B, but also reduces the number of cars on the roads, helping the city to meet its environmen­tal targets. How long it will take to reach 3 or 4 billion journeys is anyone’s guess. But with Dubai Metro becoming as much a part of the landscape as Burj Khalifa or the Frame, its reputation as a key part of the city is secure.

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