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Awash–Weldiya Railway

The Awash–Weldiya Railway is a standard gauge railway under construction, that will serve as a northward extension of the new Ethiopian National Railway Network.

Awash–Weldiya Railway
Schematic of the Awash-Weldiya railway.
Overview
StatusUnder construction
OwnerEthiopian Railway Corporation
LocaleEthiopia
Termini
Stations10 (passengers)
Service
TypeHeavy rail
SystemEthiopian Railway Network
Technical
Line length392 km (244 mi)
Number of trackssingle track
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Loading gauge5300 mm
ElectrificationOverhead line 25 kV AC / 50 Hz
Operating speed120 km/h (75 mph) (passenger);
80–90 km/h (50–56 mph) (freight)
Signallingsemi-automatic block & ETCS-2 SIL4
Highest elevation2,250 m (7,380 ft)
Maximum incline2.65 %
Route map
km
elevation
Weldiya–Mekelle Railway
Construction Phase II (2017-2020)
Weldiya
Mersa
Hayk
Tunnel 14 (2,033 m)
Tunnel 13 (1,310 m)
Tunnel 11 (317 m)
Tunnel 10 (598 m)
Tunnel 9 (1,840 m)
Tunnel 8 (605 m)
Construction Phase II (2017-2020)
Construction Phase I (2015-2018)
268.4
Kombolcha Operations Centre
1,918 m
Kombolcha Dry Port
263.9 Kombolcha
1,900 m
Tunnel 7 (287 m)
Borkena River Bridge (335 m)
216.4 Mekoy/Kemise
1,473 m
Bridge 25 (320 m)
Bridge 24 (658 m)
Tunnel 6 (326 m)
Tunnel 5 (403 m)
180.9 Karakore
1,657 m
Tunnel 4 (1,536 m)
Tunnel 3 (385 m)
157.9 Senbeta
1,434 m
Tunnel 2 (188 m)
Bridge 18 (>200 m)
120.8 Shewa Robit
1,199 m
Bridge 15 (>200 m)
Bridge 13 (>200 m)
78.5
Passing Loop
36.4 Amibara
780 m
1.1 Awash
898 m
0.0 906 m
Railways in Ethiopia in 2017:

The railroad's primary purpose is to connect the north of Ethiopia with the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway at the Awash junction and therefore connecting it with the world economy through the Port of Djibouti and also with the southern parts of Ethiopia with its capital, Addis Ababa.

The 392 km Awash–Weldiya Railway clearly is of strategic significance. It connects the whole north of Ethiopia with almost one-third of the Ethiopian population with the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway and with Ethiopia's lifeline, the port of Djibouti. Also, several large cities of Amhara Region are directly served by the Railway and the railway will connect Ethiopian industrial centers like Kombolcha with the world.

Route and description

The railway bypasses the up to 1200 metres deep Blue Nile canyon to the west of the railway, a canyon, which is a major blocking feature for travel between northern Ethiopia and southern Ethiopia. It also runs parallel to the densely populated eastern escarpment of the northwestern Ethiopian Highlands, as a gate to several tangential areas further west, such as Lake Tana and cities like Gondar.

The single-track railway starts at Awash at the Awash River, the main river in the Afar Triangle area of the Great Rift Valley. The route runs in the NNW-direction. The Awash station is at the junction with the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway. The station is only the second in Ethiopia to have two platforms for passenger trains (the other one is the main Furi-Labu railway station in Addis Ababa). It then runs through low-lying areas and then along irrigated plantations at the Awash River in Amibara woreda, the lowest elevation point of the railway (700 metres) has been reached. It then runs for 80 km through semi-arid, hilly and almost unpopulated areas, no railway station is foreseen here. After arriving at the eastern escarpment of the western Ethiopian Highlands, a second major railway station along the railway is reached, also with two platforms for passenger trains. This is Shewa Robit, a town at 1300 metres elevation, which is one of the gates to the Highlands. Up the road from here is the major city of Debre Berhan at an elevation of 2800 metres, a few dozen km to the southwest. Shewa Robit serves as the entry point for Debre Berhan and other destinations to the west and the middle section of the Awash valley to its east.

After Shewa Robit, the railway runs north through the rugged landscape that makes up the eastern escarpment of the Highlands of Ethiopia. The sections between Shewa Robit and Weldiya see lots of tunnels and bridges because of that. This escarpment has mostly originated from normal faulting along a dip-slip fault line as a result of plate tectonics in the Horn of Africa and in the Afar Triangle. It is a seismically highly active region with active faults, that can easily see earthquakes with magnitudes >6.5. The bridges along this part of the railway look quite fragile, as they are built from hollow structural sections. These are considered to flex in case of a major earthquake to save the railway. More rigid structures have been avoided here to prevent failure of the bridges.

After having passed a few towns with minor railway stations, the railway reaches its third major station with two platforms, Kombolcha. Kombolcha is a major city, as is the nearby regional capital Dessie, its twin-city a few km to the west. One is at 1800 m elevation (Kombolcha), the other at 2500 m (Dessie). Both cities serve as the second gate to the Ethiopian Highlands (after Shewa Robit), with central Ethiopian cities like Debre Markos being in reach by road further west from here. At Kombolcha, there are major infrastructural facilities for the whole railway network of Ethiopia and also a new airport just 2 km away from the railway station.

The railway continues northwards along the eastern escarpment of the Ethiopian Highlands. After another major railway station at Hayk (at Lake Hayq) at 2050 m elevation and another small railway station, the railway reaches its final destination, Weldiya, a small town, at an elevation of 1800 m. 10 km to the west of Weldiya, another major Ethiopian city is located at an elevation of 1900 m, Weldiya. Weldiya / Weldiya are another major gate (the third one) to the Ethiopian Highlands with a road to Lake Tana and the surrounding major cities like Gondar and Debre Tabor. In addition, UNESCO World Heritage Sites like Lalibela are just around the corner from Weldiya. That makes the railway station a possible major point of interest for tourism and passenger train traffic.

Weldiya, although a small town, is considered to become a railway hub in the future. It will be the terminus of a total of four railways, if the Railway Network of Ethiopia becomes a reality. Besides the Awash–Weldiya Railway, which terminates here, another major railway will extend the railway to the north, to Tigray. That is the Weldiya–Mek'ele Railway. To the east is the Weldiya–Tadjoura Railway. To the west, in extension of the Tadjoura railway, there will be the Lake Tana–Weldiya Railway. All are planned except the railway to Mek'ele, which is under construction.

Railway characteristics

The railway was based in many aspects on the railway characteristics pre-defined by the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway to keep the railways interoperable. However, a few things (like the maximum slope) were adapted to the special conditions in the mountainous area.

  • Gauge: Standard gauge
  • Track length: 392 km (428 km with 25 km of station lines and 11 km service lines)
  • Tunnels: 12 (6 between Awash and Kombolcha, 6 between Kombolcha and Weldiya), total length 9,830 m

During the planning stage, 14 tunnels were foreseen and numbered. Two have been scrapped (tunnels 1 and 12), but the numbering scheme remained the same. Until the tunnels will get names, the original numbering will persist and will be used.

The single-track section is equipped with passing loops with three lines. Often, the passing loops are present at the location of train stations. The total length of passing loops is designed to be 1100 m. The railway line is almost fully electrified. Power is transmitted to eight substations at 230 kV (3 substations) and 130 kV (5 substations). Traction power is supplied at 48 km intervals.[1]

Directly north of Kombolcha, the railway will have a few major infrastructure elements, in particular an operations centre. There is the ERC main depot for rolling stock, the main maintenance workshops and also the main logistics center of the whole Railway Network of Ethiopa. The ERC bought a rescue train for emergency operations (e.g. a heavy rail crane for emergency operations), that will be stationed at the Kombolcha workshops. The facilities will include eight rail tracks within the operations centre which will have a size of 15.000 m2.

Directly opposite to the operations centre across the railway, there is a freight yard with dry port close to an industrial park and also the Kombolcha Airport. Everything is in reach within minutes, from the Kombolcha railway station to the dry port, the operations centre and the airport.

History

After the new National Railway Network of Ethiopia was considered to be constructed from 2010 on, the Awash–Weldiya Railway was second to be constructed after the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway. The railway was awarded to constructors in 2012. It then took more than two years, until 2014, before financing was secured so that construction of both railways could start in February 2015.[3]

For this railway, the ERC was able to secure loans of US $1.165b at total costs of US $1.7b. This was facilitated through Credit Suisse.[4] Funding was provided by a consortium of lenders, including Türk Eximbank, the Swedish National Export Credits Guarantee Board, Denmark's Export Credit Board, and Swiss Export Risk Insurance.[5] The Turkish company Yapı Merkezi and its European subcontractors were chosen to do the work.[6]

The railway, internally dubbed AKH Railway, was to be constructed in two phases. The section from Awash to Kombolcha, 270 km long, represented the 1st section of the railway, while the remaining 122 km to Weldiya represented the second section. A first wave of construction started on this 2nd section in 2017. For the 1st section between Awash and Kombolcha it was expected to have all 270 km of rails laid in August 2017 so that first test runs on the railway were announced. A first test run reached a speed of 100 km/h on the railway.[7][8] However, the track laying required more work, the final track pads for the first phase of the main railway line (without counting in station and service lines) were laid in January 2018 at Awash at the junction to the Addis Ababa–Djibouti railway. In January 2019 the construction of the Awash-Kombolcha Railway Line has reached 97 percent.[9]

The construction contract assumes costs per km of railway to be US $3.8m, which is surprisingly low for a challenging terrain with 12 tunnels; theoretical calculations led to US $7m per km in 2015.[10] This gives rise to the speculation, that either another (and indirect) European funding plays a role or that only the first phase of the railway between Awash and Kombolcha was covered by the US $1.7b contract. In the latter case, the costs per km would rise to about US $6.3m per km, which sounds reasonable. Also, according to Yapı Merkezi, the main construction firm, the financing of the second phase between Kombolcha and Weldiya hasn't been fully secured by August 2017 and construction works there are uncertain to some extent.[8]

Tigray War

In October 2021 it was reported that during the Tigray War armed forces of the Tigray People's Liberation Front had looted or destroyed most of the construction equipment in Kombolcha. They also damaged part of the almost-finished railway infrastructure, such as tunnels and bridges.[11] The disruption has thrown several thousand railway workers out of work. As of July 2022 the construction site in Kombolcha was used as a camp for internally displaced persons. Nevertheless, the Ethiopian government still sees the project as a priority and intends to resume construction.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d . AKH Project owners. January 2017. Archived from the original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  2. ^ a b "WALDIA/HARA GEBEYA – MEKELE RAILWAY PROJECT BASIC DESIGN / ROUTE". China Communications Construction Company Ltd. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b Oirere, Shem (27 February 2015). "Work starts on delayed Ethiopian project". International Railway Journal. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  4. ^ "UPDATE 1-RLPC-Ethiopian government signs $865 mln railway financing". Reuters. 27 October 2014.
  5. ^ Molinari, Michele (3 June 2015). . International Railway Journal. Archived from the original on 24 June 2015.
  6. ^ "Awash Woldia / Hara Gebeya Railway Line Project, Ethiopia". Railway Journal. 2015.
  7. ^ "Test running on next Ethiopian line to start in August". Railway Gazette. 30 June 2017.
  8. ^ a b "Turkish construction giant eyes more Africa projects after Ethiopia, Tanzania railways". Daily Sabah. 1 August 2017.
  9. ^ "ERC finalizing Awash-Kombolcha Railway project". LAKACHEW ATINAFU. January 2019.
  10. ^ "EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVE TRACK ALIGNMENTS ON WHOLE LIFE COST OF LOT 11 SECTION OF THE AWASH-WELDIYA RAILWAY LINE" (PDF). AAiT. March 2015.
  11. ^ "Terrorist TPLF Destroys Awash-Kombolcha-Hara Gebeya Railway Project". Walta. 8 October 2021. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
  12. ^ "Ethiopia's civil war has doused hopes of prosperity under Abiy Ahmed's government". The Globe and Mail. 7 July 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2022.

awash, weldiya, railway, standard, gauge, railway, under, construction, that, will, serve, northward, extension, ethiopian, national, railway, network, schematic, awash, weldiya, railway, overviewstatusunder, constructionownerethiopian, railway, corporationloc. The Awash Weldiya Railway is a standard gauge railway under construction that will serve as a northward extension of the new Ethiopian National Railway Network Awash Weldiya RailwaySchematic of the Awash Weldiya railway OverviewStatusUnder constructionOwnerEthiopian Railway CorporationLocaleEthiopiaTerminiAwashWeldiyaStations10 passengers ServiceTypeHeavy railSystemEthiopian Railway NetworkTechnicalLine length392 km 244 mi Number of trackssingle trackTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeLoading gauge5300 mmElectrificationOverhead line 25 kV AC 50 HzOperating speed120 km h 75 mph passenger 80 90 km h 50 56 mph freight Signallingsemi automatic block amp ETCS 2 SIL4Highest elevation2 250 m 7 380 ft Maximum incline2 65 Route mapLegendkm elevationWeldiya Mekelle RailwayConstruction Phase II 2017 2020 LalibelaWeldiyaMersaHaykTunnel 14 2 033 m Tunnel 13 1 310 m Tunnel 11 317 m Tunnel 10 598 m Tunnel 9 1 840 m Tunnel 8 605 m Construction Phase II 2017 2020 Construction Phase I 2015 2018 268 4 Kombolcha Operations Centre 1 918 mKombolcha Dry Port263 9 Kombolcha 1 900 mTunnel 7 287 m Borkena River Bridge 335 m 216 4 Mekoy Kemise 1 473 mBridge 25 320 m Bridge 24 658 m Tunnel 6 326 m Tunnel 5 403 m 180 9 Karakore 1 657 mTunnel 4 1 536 m Tunnel 3 385 m 157 9 Senbeta 1 434 mTunnel 2 188 m Bridge 18 gt 200 m 120 8 Shewa Robit 1 199 mBridge 15 gt 200 m Bridge 13 gt 200 m 78 5 Passing Loop36 4 Amibara 780 m1 1 Awash 898 m0 0 Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway 906 mRailways in Ethiopia in 2017 Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway Awash Hara Gebeya Weldiya Mekelle Railways Ethio Djibouti Railway The railroad s primary purpose is to connect the north of Ethiopia with the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway at the Awash junction and therefore connecting it with the world economy through the Port of Djibouti and also with the southern parts of Ethiopia with its capital Addis Ababa The 392 km Awash Weldiya Railway clearly is of strategic significance It connects the whole north of Ethiopia with almost one third of the Ethiopian population with the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway and with Ethiopia s lifeline the port of Djibouti Also several large cities of Amhara Region are directly served by the Railway and the railway will connect Ethiopian industrial centers like Kombolcha with the world Contents 1 Route and description 2 Railway characteristics 3 History 3 1 Tigray War 4 See also 5 ReferencesRoute and description EditThe railway bypasses the up to 1200 metres deep Blue Nile canyon to the west of the railway a canyon which is a major blocking feature for travel between northern Ethiopia and southern Ethiopia It also runs parallel to the densely populated eastern escarpment of the northwestern Ethiopian Highlands as a gate to several tangential areas further west such as Lake Tana and cities like Gondar The single track railway starts at Awash at the Awash River the main river in the Afar Triangle area of the Great Rift Valley The route runs in the NNW direction The Awash station is at the junction with the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway The station is only the second in Ethiopia to have two platforms for passenger trains the other one is the main Furi Labu railway station in Addis Ababa It then runs through low lying areas and then along irrigated plantations at the Awash River in Amibara woreda the lowest elevation point of the railway 700 metres has been reached It then runs for 80 km through semi arid hilly and almost unpopulated areas no railway station is foreseen here After arriving at the eastern escarpment of the western Ethiopian Highlands a second major railway station along the railway is reached also with two platforms for passenger trains This is Shewa Robit a town at 1300 metres elevation which is one of the gates to the Highlands Up the road from here is the major city of Debre Berhan at an elevation of 2800 metres a few dozen km to the southwest Shewa Robit serves as the entry point for Debre Berhan and other destinations to the west and the middle section of the Awash valley to its east After Shewa Robit the railway runs north through the rugged landscape that makes up the eastern escarpment of the Highlands of Ethiopia The sections between Shewa Robit and Weldiya see lots of tunnels and bridges because of that This escarpment has mostly originated from normal faulting along a dip slip fault line as a result of plate tectonics in the Horn of Africa and in the Afar Triangle It is a seismically highly active region with active faults that can easily see earthquakes with magnitudes gt 6 5 The bridges along this part of the railway look quite fragile as they are built from hollow structural sections These are considered to flex in case of a major earthquake to save the railway More rigid structures have been avoided here to prevent failure of the bridges After having passed a few towns with minor railway stations the railway reaches its third major station with two platforms Kombolcha Kombolcha is a major city as is the nearby regional capital Dessie its twin city a few km to the west One is at 1800 m elevation Kombolcha the other at 2500 m Dessie Both cities serve as the second gate to the Ethiopian Highlands after Shewa Robit with central Ethiopian cities like Debre Markos being in reach by road further west from here At Kombolcha there are major infrastructural facilities for the whole railway network of Ethiopia and also a new airport just 2 km away from the railway station The railway continues northwards along the eastern escarpment of the Ethiopian Highlands After another major railway station at Hayk at Lake Hayq at 2050 m elevation and another small railway station the railway reaches its final destination Weldiya a small town at an elevation of 1800 m 10 km to the west of Weldiya another major Ethiopian city is located at an elevation of 1900 m Weldiya Weldiya Weldiya are another major gate the third one to the Ethiopian Highlands with a road to Lake Tana and the surrounding major cities like Gondar and Debre Tabor In addition UNESCO World Heritage Sites like Lalibela are just around the corner from Weldiya That makes the railway station a possible major point of interest for tourism and passenger train traffic Weldiya although a small town is considered to become a railway hub in the future It will be the terminus of a total of four railways if the Railway Network of Ethiopia becomes a reality Besides the Awash Weldiya Railway which terminates here another major railway will extend the railway to the north to Tigray That is the Weldiya Mek ele Railway To the east is the Weldiya Tadjoura Railway To the west in extension of the Tadjoura railway there will be the Lake Tana Weldiya Railway All are planned except the railway to Mek ele which is under construction Railway characteristics EditFurther information Rail transport in Ethiopia The railway was based in many aspects on the railway characteristics pre defined by the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway to keep the railways interoperable However a few things like the maximum slope were adapted to the special conditions in the mountainous area Gauge Standard gauge Track length 392 km 428 km with 25 km of station lines and 11 km service lines Tunnels 12 6 between Awash and Kombolcha 6 between Kombolcha and Weldiya total length 9 830 mDuring the planning stage 14 tunnels were foreseen and numbered Two have been scrapped tunnels 1 and 12 but the numbering scheme remained the same Until the tunnels will get names the original numbering will persist and will be used Bridges 65 including overpasses 20 with length gt 100 m longest bridge with 658 m length at 57 m depth total length 7 165 m Culverts 917 total length 41 km Couplers Janney AAR Brakes Air Electrification Overhead catenary 25 kV AC 50 Hz Train protection system ETCS 2 SIL 4 with 12 radio towers Maximum vehicle loading gauge height 5300 mm 1 Target speed passenger 120 km h 75 mph Target speed freight 80 km h 50 mph in rugged terrain 90 km h 56 mph 1 Maximum train load freight 3 000 tonnes 3 000 long tons 3 300 short tons gross 2 Minimum railway curve radius 1 200 m 3 900 ft 600 800 m or 2 000 2 600 ft at difficult locations 2 Designed transport capacity 10 million tonnes annually target is 8 5 million tonnes of freight plus passenger traffic 3 Maximum gradient 2 65 1 in 38 1 Level crossings permitted no full grade separation The single track section is equipped with passing loops with three lines Often the passing loops are present at the location of train stations The total length of passing loops is designed to be 1100 m The railway line is almost fully electrified Power is transmitted to eight substations at 230 kV 3 substations and 130 kV 5 substations Traction power is supplied at 48 km intervals 1 Directly north of Kombolcha the railway will have a few major infrastructure elements in particular an operations centre There is the ERC main depot for rolling stock the main maintenance workshops and also the main logistics center of the whole Railway Network of Ethiopa The ERC bought a rescue train for emergency operations e g a heavy rail crane for emergency operations that will be stationed at the Kombolcha workshops The facilities will include eight rail tracks within the operations centre which will have a size of 15 000 m2 Directly opposite to the operations centre across the railway there is a freight yard with dry port close to an industrial park and also the Kombolcha Airport Everything is in reach within minutes from the Kombolcha railway station to the dry port the operations centre and the airport History EditAfter the new National Railway Network of Ethiopia was considered to be constructed from 2010 on the Awash Weldiya Railway was second to be constructed after the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railway The railway was awarded to constructors in 2012 It then took more than two years until 2014 before financing was secured so that construction of both railways could start in February 2015 3 For this railway the ERC was able to secure loans of US 1 165b at total costs of US 1 7b This was facilitated through Credit Suisse 4 Funding was provided by a consortium of lenders including Turk Eximbank the Swedish National Export Credits Guarantee Board Denmark s Export Credit Board and Swiss Export Risk Insurance 5 The Turkish company Yapi Merkezi and its European subcontractors were chosen to do the work 6 The railway internally dubbed AKH Railway was to be constructed in two phases The section from Awash to Kombolcha 270 km long represented the 1st section of the railway while the remaining 122 km to Weldiya represented the second section A first wave of construction started on this 2nd section in 2017 For the 1st section between Awash and Kombolcha it was expected to have all 270 km of rails laid in August 2017 so that first test runs on the railway were announced A first test run reached a speed of 100 km h on the railway 7 8 However the track laying required more work the final track pads for the first phase of the main railway line without counting in station and service lines were laid in January 2018 at Awash at the junction to the Addis Ababa Djibouti railway In January 2019 the construction of the Awash Kombolcha Railway Line has reached 97 percent 9 The construction contract assumes costs per km of railway to be US 3 8m which is surprisingly low for a challenging terrain with 12 tunnels theoretical calculations led to US 7m per km in 2015 10 This gives rise to the speculation that either another and indirect European funding plays a role or that only the first phase of the railway between Awash and Kombolcha was covered by the US 1 7b contract In the latter case the costs per km would rise to about US 6 3m per km which sounds reasonable Also according to Yapi Merkezi the main construction firm the financing of the second phase between Kombolcha and Weldiya hasn t been fully secured by August 2017 and construction works there are uncertain to some extent 8 Tigray War Edit In October 2021 it was reported that during the Tigray War armed forces of the Tigray People s Liberation Front had looted or destroyed most of the construction equipment in Kombolcha They also damaged part of the almost finished railway infrastructure such as tunnels and bridges 11 The disruption has thrown several thousand railway workers out of work As of July 2022 update the construction site in Kombolcha was used as a camp for internally displaced persons Nevertheless the Ethiopian government still sees the project as a priority and intends to resume construction 12 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Awash Hara Gebeya Railway Rail transport in Ethiopia East African Railway Master Plan railway network planned to be linked with this line Railway stations in EthiopiaPortals Trains AfricaReferences Edit a b c d Project Summary AKH Project owners January 2017 Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 a b WALDIA HARA GEBEYA MEKELE RAILWAY PROJECT BASIC DESIGN ROUTE China Communications Construction Company Ltd Retrieved 15 January 2018 a b Oirere Shem 27 February 2015 Work starts on delayed Ethiopian project International Railway Journal Retrieved 14 March 2018 UPDATE 1 RLPC Ethiopian government signs 865 mln railway financing Reuters 27 October 2014 Molinari Michele 3 June 2015 Ethiopia turns big plans into reality International Railway Journal Archived from the original on 24 June 2015 Awash Woldia Hara Gebeya Railway Line Project Ethiopia Railway Journal 2015 Test running on next Ethiopian line to start in August Railway Gazette 30 June 2017 a b Turkish construction giant eyes more Africa projects after Ethiopia Tanzania railways Daily Sabah 1 August 2017 ERC finalizing Awash Kombolcha Railway project LAKACHEW ATINAFU January 2019 EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVE TRACK ALIGNMENTS ON WHOLE LIFE COST OF LOT 11 SECTION OF THE AWASH WELDIYA RAILWAY LINE PDF AAiT March 2015 Terrorist TPLF Destroys Awash Kombolcha Hara Gebeya Railway Project Walta 8 October 2021 Retrieved 18 October 2022 Ethiopia s civil war has doused hopes of prosperity under Abiy Ahmed s government The Globe and Mail 7 July 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Awash Weldiya Railway amp oldid 1143580044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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