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Rail transport in Mongolia

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Traders in Zamyn-Üüd station, Dornogovi aimag

Rail transport in Mongolia is an important means of travel in the landlocked nation with few paved roads. According to official statistics, rail transport carried 93% of Mongolian freight and 43% of passenger turnover in 2007.[1] The Mongolian rail system employs 12,500 people.[2] The national operator is UBTZ (Ulaanbataar Railway, Template:Lang-mn), traditionally also known as Mongolian Railway (MTZ, Template:Lang-mn). This can be a source of confusion, since MTZ is a distinct company established in 2008.[3] The Mongolian Railway College is located in Ulaanbaatar.[4]

Routes

The Trans-Mongolian Railway connects the Trans-Siberian Railway from Ulan Ude in Russia to Erenhot and Beijing in China through the capital Ulan Bator. The Mongolian section of this line runs for 1,110 kilometres (690 mi).[2] The Trans-Mongolian Railway runs through Mongolia on 1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) Russian gauge track, changing to standard gauge track after entering China. There are several spur lines: to the copper combine in Erdenet, to coal mines in Sharyngol, Nalaikh and Baganuur, to the flourspar mine in Bor-Öndör and to the former Soviet military base in Züünbayan.

A separate railway line exists in the east of the country between Choibalsan and the Trans-Siberian at Borzya; however, that line is closed to passengers beyond the Mongolian town of Chuluunkhoroot.[5] This line used to have a spur line to the uranium mine at Mardai, however this spur line was torn up and sold in the late 1990s/ early 2000s.

For domestic transport, daily trains run from Ulaanbaatar to Darkhan, Sukhbaatar, and Erdenet, as well as Zamyn-Üüd, Choir and Sainshand. Mongolia uses the 1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) (Russian gauge) with a total system length of 1,810 kilometres (1,120 mi).[6]

Mongolian railways transported 20.5 million tons of freight in 2013, which is close to the system's full capacity. Transporting transit cargo between Russia and China is an important source of revenue for the country's railway system; in addition to this, railways are used to transport domestic coal to power plants.[7]

Proposals



Rolling stock

As Mongolia's railroads are not electrified, UBTZ relies entirely on Diesel traction. Most common locomotives are M62 variants, including five rebuilt 2Zagal (Template:Lang-mn) double engines.[11] Other engines include TEM2 and TE116 variants, Dash-7 and one Evolution locomotive on lease from GE.[12] In October 2010, Ulaanbaatar Railway ordered 35 2TE116UM diesel freight locomotives from Transmash.[13]

Maps

See also

References

  1. ^ Freight and passenger turnover in tons*km and passenger*km, respectively. 2007 Statistical Yearbook of Mongolia, p. 252
  2. ^ a b Montsame News Agency. Mongolia. 2006, ISBN 99929-0-627-8, p. 93
  3. ^ See http://www.mtz.mn/eng/index.php/2014-03-14-00-50-52/company-introduction
  4. ^ http://www.4icu.org/reviews/12212.htm
  5. ^ Lonely Planet Mongolia: Choibalsan transport
  6. ^ Lonely Planet Mongolia: Rail Transport
  7. ^ The Mongolian-Russian-Chinese Northern Railway Corridor. Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor. Volume: 11; Issue: 15. January 24, 2014. By: Alicia J. Campi
  8. ^ "Ukhaa Khudag-Gashuun Sukhait Railway". SMEC Holdings. Retrieved 2012-09-20.
  9. ^ = Kohn, Michael (2014-10-24). "Mongolia Embraces China With Compatible Rail to Cut Costs".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  10. ^ Railway Gazette International May 2014, p08.
  11. ^ 2Zagal-006 and -007 are rebuilt TE10s.
  12. ^ GE press release
  13. ^ "Railway Gazette: Ulaanbaatar Railway orders Transmash locomotives". Retrieved 2010-11-01.