fbpx
Wikipedia

African Union of Railways

The African Union of Railways is an organisation under the auspices of the new African Union dealing with railways. It is similar to the International Union of Railways (UIC).

Overview edit

Africa's railways are disjointed and disconnected. The AUR hopes to rectify things. By 2012 a number of railway projects had been proposed to rectify this, some of which would make connections between international railway systems. This interconnectivity would require the development of more standardised systems.

Standards edit

Gauge edit

The AUR sees that conversion to a common gauge is too difficult and expensive due to the gauge muddle,[citation needed] but based on reports from the World Bank, does see the following gauges as preferred in the following regions:

 
Schematic map of African railways by gauge
 
1000 mm and 1067 mm gauges can be combined as a 4 rail dual gauge with bonus 1435 mm gauge

Several railways such as Senegal, Guinea and Tanzania have talked about conversion to standard gauge, though it remains to be seen if talk develops into action. Guinea built one new branch as standard gauge even though metre gauge is needed to take the ore to the port. Nigeria has built one short branch with dual gauge sleepers, and a network aiming to serve the port of Warri is also standard gauge. An extension from Tanzania into Rwanda is proposed as standard gauge, though it starts at a station that is already a container transhipment dry port. Mining railways that carry very large tonnages (> 10,000 metric tonnes per year) are generally standard gauge.

However, conspicuous by their absence, is the possibility of dual gauge, containerisation, variable gauge axles, bogie exchange, piggy back operation and even triple gauge.

However the African Union now supports the 50-year plan to build the African Integrated High Speed Railway Network.

 
Triple gauge supports 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in), 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) and 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in).
The wide separation or the outer pairs of rails (435 mm and 368 mm) provides space for railclips and suits turnout construction.

Timeline edit

2014 edit

Construction of standard gauge lines is being progressed in

Break of gauge edit

Because the mainlines of different countries of different gauges rarely meet, except Kidatu, break of gauge is paradoxically not a problem at the moment.

Couplings edit

Couplings in use include:

The American AAR coupler is the most widely used of the modern types, and is usable with the heaviest trains of regularly 32,000 t (31,500 long tons; 35,300 short tons).

Whatever the advantages of the modern SA3 coupler, it is not as widely used as the AAR and is in the minority. The SA3 coupler has been used in a train of 43,400 t (42,700 long tons; 47,800 short tons), thus either matching or surpassing the strength of the AAR coupler.

Match wagons can overcome incompatibilities at the price of extra deadweight. Similarly with coupling adapters.

The type of coupling is less important when trains travel in fixed block loads.

Modern wagons are usually built with draw-gear designed for easy conversion to some kind of centre coupling such as the AAR or SA3.

Brakes edit

Westinghouse air brakes and vacuum brakes (or no continuous brakes at all) are usually fitted. Dual brakes or piped only can overcome incompatibilities. Vacuum brakes are considered to be obsolete. Electronically controlled pneumatic brakes (ECP) are starting to be fitted on faster, heavy-duty trains for higher performance, and the two ECP systems are compatible. Air brakes are to be preferred to vacuum brakes because of their greater power.

Electrification edit

Most railways in Africa are diesel-operated, but electrification where it exists it mostly conforms to the modern standard of 25 kV AC, with some obsolete systems using the older 3 kV DC. Trams in cities are usually low voltage such as 750 VDC. Dual and multi voltage locomotives and electric multiple units (EMUs) are proven technology. Africa has great hydro-electric potential to run electric trains with, though this would not happen overnight.

Loading gauge edit

Loading gauges vary considerably, and through trains would be forced to use the most restrictive loading gauge along its route. The structure gauge of tunnels and bridges needs to be about 1 m (3.28 ft) taller to allow for piggy back operation of trains of one gauge on the wagons of another gauge.

The loading gauge width for new standard gauge railways in Ethiopia and Kenya is following the 3,400 millimetres (11 ft 2 in) standard for high speed lines pioneered by Shinkansen in Japan, and followed by South Korea and China. May also be followed by Tanzania and Nigeria.

Platform and carriage floor heights should be standardised, as well as the gap between platform and carriage.

Axle loads edit

Axle loads vary considerably, depending on the strength of the track, especially the weight of the rails which are generally too light for modern traffic. A reasonable minimum rail weight is 40 kg/m (80.64 lb/yd), though 50 kg/m (100.80 lb/yd) or 60 kg/m (120.95 lb/yd) would be preferred for heavy duty use.

The Kribi-Mbalam iron ore railway has an axleload of 37.5T.

Train lengths and crossing loop lengths edit

Crossing loops should be as long as the longest likely train, considered globally. Some UIC standards are 750 and 1,500 m (2,461 and 4,921 ft). Extra length of the loop enables the rear of the train to clear the main line at more than line speed thus saving time.

Because of dangers imposed by wild animals such as lions, manual control of loops turnouts is not necessarily a good idea, and some degree of automation of these turnouts, and fencing, is desirable.[1]

Minimum radius edit

Limits speeds, although speeds are less important on minor branch lines. Minimum radius also affects heaviest trains, due to tendency to pull wagons off the rails and derail them.

Language edit

Confusion and even accidents can occur if more than one language (or accent) is used to operate a railway. A simplified language such as seaspeak would be useful to reduce such problems.

Namibia edit

As of 2007, Namibian railways built nearly 300 km (190 mi) of a line with Angola. Namibia has been using Tubular Modular Track. Tubular Modular Track maintains its track resilience even in harshest sandy desert conditions. Transnet Freight Rail in South Africa uses Tubular Modular Track in the main Ermelo yard on its 70 million tonnes per annum heavy haul coal export line. The continuous support provided by Tubular Modular Track increases rails and turnout life by a factor of two and weld life by a factor of ten (compared to conventional and slabtrack offering discrete support for rails). The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA) uses Tubular Modular Track in stations to ensure fixed vertical alignment between platforms and trains.

Nigeria edit

Plans by Nigeria's to change convert its 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge lines to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) have accelerated in 2020. Some new lines are double track replacing single track sections.

Libya edit

Libya started in 2007 building a completely new 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) railway system, albeit slowly. A link across the Sahara to Central Africa, probably Nigeria, would also spur the growth of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) connections, which make use of continuous access to the Middle East, Europe, and even China in the foreseeable future. In March 2011, the works ground to a halt because of the revolution[2][3] with no news when or even if they would resume.

Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda edit

Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda are odd men in the 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) South & East zone as they use 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) gauge.

The latest plans for a greatly expanded railway with links to adjoining countries are to build new lines in standard gauge and possibly upgrade and convert existing metre gauge lines to the same wider gauge.[4]

Zambia edit

Iron ore railways edit

Heavy duty iron ore railways in Africa carry much more traffic than ordinary railways so they almost always adopt standard gauge to make use of proven off the shelf technology. New such lines are planned for Cameroon, Senegal and Guinea. Gabon is already using 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in). The Transguinean Railways is proposed to be standard gauge. Some standard gauge lines in Liberia are to be restored. An isolated 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge line in Sierra Leone is to be converted to standard gauge.

High Speed Lines edit

High Speed Lines (AIHSRN)

Conferences edit

  • - a conference held in Brazzaville on 10–14 April 2006.
  • 35th General Assembly

Timeline edit

2023 edit

The rail link on the Brazzaville–Kinshasa Bridge will be single track. Both sides of the bridge use the same 1067mm gauge. For compatibility with future AIHSRN a third rail or Dual Gauge sleepers should be provided.

2010 edit

2007 edit

  • Railway Corridors in Continent to be Connected - The UAR is set to work out modalities on how to link all railway corridors in the continent.[6]

Related organisations edit

Similar organisations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Patterson, Bruce D. (12 February 2004). The Lions of Tsavo: Exploring the Legacy of Africa's Notorious Man-Eaters. McGraw Hill Professional. ISBN 9780071363334 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Russian Construction In Libya Halted". Railways Africa. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 2018-08-09.
  3. ^ "Chinese Construction In Libya Halted". Railways Africa. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 2018-08-09.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-08-25.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on June 6, 2010. Retrieved Sep 29, 2019.
  6. ^ "Africa: Railway Corridors in Continent to Be Connected". AllAfrica.com. 2007-10-23. Retrieved 2007-10-23.
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2018-08-09.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-01-07. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
  9. ^ AIHSRN
  10. ^ "The New Times - Rwanda". The New Times - Rwanda.
  11. ^ Railways Africa May 2009, p8

african, union, railways, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, j. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African Union of Railways news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The African Union of Railways is an organisation under the auspices of the new African Union dealing with railways It is similar to the International Union of Railways UIC Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Standards 1 1 1 Gauge 1 2 Timeline 1 2 1 2014 1 3 Break of gauge 1 3 1 Couplings 1 3 2 Brakes 1 3 3 Electrification 1 3 4 Loading gauge 1 3 5 Axle loads 1 3 6 Train lengths and crossing loop lengths 1 3 7 Minimum radius 1 3 8 Language 1 4 Namibia 1 5 Nigeria 1 6 Libya 1 7 Tanzania Kenya and Uganda 1 8 Zambia 1 9 Iron ore railways 1 10 High Speed Lines 2 Conferences 3 Timeline 3 1 2023 3 2 2010 3 3 2007 4 Related organisations 5 Similar organisations 6 See also 7 ReferencesOverview editAfrica s railways are disjointed and disconnected The AUR hopes to rectify things By 2012 a number of railway projects had been proposed to rectify this some of which would make connections between international railway systems This interconnectivity would require the development of more standardised systems Standards edit Gauge edit The AUR sees that conversion to a common gauge is too difficult and expensive due to the gauge muddle citation needed but based on reports from the World Bank does see the following gauges as preferred in the following regions nbsp Schematic map of African railways by gauge nbsp 1000 mm and 1067 mm gauges can be combined as a 4 rail dual gauge with bonus 1435 mm gaugeNorth 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in South 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in mostly connected and quite strong East 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in but Tanzania Kenya Uganda and isolated Ethiopia are 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in West 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in but Sierra Leone and Nigeria 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in are isolated Other 610 mm 2 ft South Africa NG 950 mm 3 ft 1 3 8 in Eritrea NG 1 055 mm 3 ft 5 1 2 in Algeria NG isolated systems Scattered mining railways 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in plus Gabon Several railways such as Senegal Guinea and Tanzania have talked about conversion to standard gauge though it remains to be seen if talk develops into action Guinea built one new branch as standard gauge even though metre gauge is needed to take the ore to the port Nigeria has built one short branch with dual gauge sleepers and a network aiming to serve the port of Warri is also standard gauge An extension from Tanzania into Rwanda is proposed as standard gauge though it starts at a station that is already a container transhipment dry port Mining railways that carry very large tonnages gt 10 000 metric tonnes per year are generally standard gauge However conspicuous by their absence is the possibility of dual gauge containerisation variable gauge axles bogie exchange piggy back operation and even triple gauge However the African Union now supports the 50 year plan to build the African Integrated High Speed Railway Network nbsp Triple gauge supports 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in and 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in The wide separation or the outer pairs of rails 435 mm and 368 mm provides space for railclips and suits turnout construction Timeline edit 2014 edit Construction of standard gauge lines is being progressed in Ethiopia and Eritrea Kenya Tanzania Nigeria Ghana Cameroon Kribi Mbalam 2023 now under construction Break of gauge edit Because the mainlines of different countries of different gauges rarely meet except Kidatu break of gauge is paradoxically not a problem at the moment Couplings edit Couplings in use include European style buffers and chain couplers the spacing and height of the buffers varying with the gauge Norwegian chopper couplings of various kinds which are low in strength and obsolete AAR coupler an automatic type used throughout the contiguous Southern African network SA3 coupler an automatic type used in the former Soviet Union Digital automatic coupling proposal More than one of the above such as buffers and AAR coupler There are a few other uncommon and obsolete types such as those used in Benin The American AAR coupler is the most widely used of the modern types and is usable with the heaviest trains of regularly 32 000 t 31 500 long tons 35 300 short tons Whatever the advantages of the modern SA3 coupler it is not as widely used as the AAR and is in the minority The SA3 coupler has been used in a train of 43 400 t 42 700 long tons 47 800 short tons thus either matching or surpassing the strength of the AAR coupler Match wagons can overcome incompatibilities at the price of extra deadweight Similarly with coupling adapters The type of coupling is less important when trains travel in fixed block loads Modern wagons are usually built with draw gear designed for easy conversion to some kind of centre coupling such as the AAR or SA3 Brakes edit Westinghouse air brakes and vacuum brakes or no continuous brakes at all are usually fitted Dual brakes or piped only can overcome incompatibilities Vacuum brakes are considered to be obsolete Electronically controlled pneumatic brakes ECP are starting to be fitted on faster heavy duty trains for higher performance and the two ECP systems are compatible Air brakes are to be preferred to vacuum brakes because of their greater power Electrification edit Most railways in Africa are diesel operated but electrification where it exists it mostly conforms to the modern standard of 25 kV AC with some obsolete systems using the older 3 kV DC Trams in cities are usually low voltage such as 750 VDC Dual and multi voltage locomotives and electric multiple units EMUs are proven technology Africa has great hydro electric potential to run electric trains with though this would not happen overnight Loading gauge edit Loading gauges vary considerably and through trains would be forced to use the most restrictive loading gauge along its route The structure gauge of tunnels and bridges needs to be about 1 m 3 28 ft taller to allow for piggy back operation of trains of one gauge on the wagons of another gauge The loading gauge width for new standard gauge railways in Ethiopia and Kenya is following the 3 400 millimetres 11 ft 2 in standard for high speed lines pioneered by Shinkansen in Japan and followed by South Korea and China May also be followed by Tanzania and Nigeria Platform and carriage floor heights should be standardised as well as the gap between platform and carriage Axle loads edit Axle loads vary considerably depending on the strength of the track especially the weight of the rails which are generally too light for modern traffic A reasonable minimum rail weight is 40 kg m 80 64 lb yd though 50 kg m 100 80 lb yd or 60 kg m 120 95 lb yd would be preferred for heavy duty use The Kribi Mbalam iron ore railway has an axleload of 37 5T Train lengths and crossing loop lengths edit Crossing loops should be as long as the longest likely train considered globally Some UIC standards are 750 and 1 500 m 2 461 and 4 921 ft Extra length of the loop enables the rear of the train to clear the main line at more than line speed thus saving time Because of dangers imposed by wild animals such as lions manual control of loops turnouts is not necessarily a good idea and some degree of automation of these turnouts and fencing is desirable 1 Minimum radius edit Limits speeds although speeds are less important on minor branch lines Minimum radius also affects heaviest trains due to tendency to pull wagons off the rails and derail them Language edit Confusion and even accidents can occur if more than one language or accent is used to operate a railway A simplified language such as seaspeak would be useful to reduce such problems Pecrot rail crash with confusion of Dutch and French speakers Complicated phrases can be simplified and made succinct by using say telegraphic codes Great Western Railway telegraphic codes Australian railway telegraphic codes Railway block code Commercial code Words can be spelled out over noisy lines using say the NATO phonetic alphabet Names of stations should be distinguishable from one another Similarly the Post Office doesn t like towns spoken or written alike Thus the village of Perth in New South Wales was getting mail intended for Perth Scotland and Perth Western Australia so it was renamed Perthville Thus Makutopora and Makutupora are two distinct localities Namibia edit As of 2007 Namibian railways built nearly 300 km 190 mi of a line with Angola Namibia has been using Tubular Modular Track Tubular Modular Track maintains its track resilience even in harshest sandy desert conditions Transnet Freight Rail in South Africa uses Tubular Modular Track in the main Ermelo yard on its 70 million tonnes per annum heavy haul coal export line The continuous support provided by Tubular Modular Track increases rails and turnout life by a factor of two and weld life by a factor of ten compared to conventional and slabtrack offering discrete support for rails The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa PRASA uses Tubular Modular Track in stations to ensure fixed vertical alignment between platforms and trains Nigeria edit Plans by Nigeria s to change convert its 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in gauge lines to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in have accelerated in 2020 Some new lines are double track replacing single track sections Libya edit Libya started in 2007 building a completely new 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in railway system albeit slowly A link across the Sahara to Central Africa probably Nigeria would also spur the growth of 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in connections which make use of continuous access to the Middle East Europe and even China in the foreseeable future In March 2011 the works ground to a halt because of the revolution 2 3 with no news when or even if they would resume Tanzania Kenya and Uganda edit Tanzania Kenya and Uganda are odd men in the 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in South amp East zone as they use 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge The latest plans for a greatly expanded railway with links to adjoining countries are to build new lines in standard gauge and possibly upgrade and convert existing metre gauge lines to the same wider gauge 4 Zambia edit nbsp Mchinji connects to Malawi Railways 5 nbsp Chipata 1 212 m or 3 976 ft railhead opened 2010Iron ore railways edit Heavy duty iron ore railways in Africa carry much more traffic than ordinary railways so they almost always adopt standard gauge to make use of proven off the shelf technology New such lines are planned for Cameroon Senegal and Guinea Gabon is already using 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in The Transguinean Railways is proposed to be standard gauge Some standard gauge lines in Liberia are to be restored An isolated 3 ft 6 in 1 067 mm gauge line in Sierra Leone is to be converted to standard gauge High Speed Lines edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2022 High Speed Lines AIHSRN Conferences edit 1 a conference held in Brazzaville on 10 14 April 2006 35th General Assembly 2006Timeline editMain article Timeline of African Union of Railways 2023 edit The rail link on the Brazzaville Kinshasa Bridge will be single track Both sides of the bridge use the same 1067mm gauge For compatibility with future AIHSRN a third rail or Dual Gauge sleepers should be provided 2010 edit Dakar Port Sudan Railway2007 edit Railway Corridors in Continent to be Connected The UAR is set to work out modalities on how to link all railway corridors in the continent 6 Related organisations editNorthern Corridor Transit and Transport Coordination Authority Southern African Railway Association United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD 7 Southern African Railway Association 8 ECOWAS railSimilar organisations editAssociation of American Railroads AAR International Union of Railways UIC OSShDSee also edit nbsp Railways portal nbsp Africa portalAfrican Integrated High Speed Rail Network AIHSRN 9 AfricaRail East African Railway Master Plan 10 North South Corridor Project 11 Timeline of African Union of Railways Trans Asian RailwayReferences edit Patterson Bruce D 12 February 2004 The Lions of Tsavo Exploring the Legacy of Africa s Notorious Man Eaters McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 9780071363334 via Google Books Russian Construction In Libya Halted Railways Africa 28 July 2015 Retrieved 2018 08 09 Chinese Construction In Libya Halted Railways Africa 28 July 2015 Retrieved 2018 08 09 China 4 6b railway deal to test Kenya s relations with Uganda TradeMark Southern Africa TMSA Advancing Regional Integration in Southern and Eastern Africa Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2012 08 25 Chipata Railway Railways Africa Archived from the original on June 6 2010 Retrieved Sep 29 2019 Africa Railway Corridors in Continent to Be Connected AllAfrica com 2007 10 23 Retrieved 2007 10 23 Tanzania paper on transport and communications infrastructure development and transit trade facilitation PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 05 Retrieved 2018 08 09 Southern Africa Railway Association Archived from the original on 2009 01 07 Retrieved 2009 04 15 AIHSRN The New Times Rwanda The New Times Rwanda Railways Africa May 2009 p8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African Union of Railways amp oldid 1150064795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.