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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Ethiopia signs $3.2 bln deals for new railway line | Reuters

ADDIS ABABA, June 28 | Thu Jun 28, 2012 6:05pm IST

(Reuters) - Ethiopia has signed two deals worth $3.2 billion with Chinese and Turkish companies to construct a railway to link the land-locked Horn of Africa nation to Djibouti's Tadjourah port to export potash, officials said.

Ethiopia, which has seen high economic growth over the past five years, hopes to exploit growing business ties with China, India and Turkey to boost its expanding economy.

Under a five-year development plan launched in 2010, the government aims to pursue power projects and boost infrastructure, including building several new railways.

Getachew Betru, head of the Ethiopian Railways Corporation (ERC), said Turkish firm Yapi Merkezi will build a $1.7 billion railway line in the northeast, part of a project that stretches to Djibouti's third port of Tadjourah, which is under construction.

Tadjourah, on the Red Sea, is the closest outlet for Ethiopia's Afar region, where a number of foreign firms, including Canada's Allana Potash Corp, a re developing potash mines.

Allana said in February it would work with Djibouti authorities to integrate required potash storage and handling facilities into the new port plans.

Wednesday's deal followed a $1.5 billion agreement signed over the weekend between ERC and China Communications Construction Company to build a different section of the railway line to Tadjourah port.

Yapi Merkazi is expected to complete its portion of the line in 42 months, the foreign ministry said on its website.

This will link up with the section being built by the Chinese firm, as well as other portions, to give Ethiopia an alternative port access from the current route to Djibouti's mai n outlet, and providing an outlet for potash development,

Ethiopia aims to construct 5,000 km of railway lines by 2020 and says companies from BRIC nations have shown an interest in several projects.

The neighbouring economies are reliant on each other with about 70 percent of all trade through the tiny Red Sea state

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