Out of a total 947 kilometres
length of rail, only 120 kilometres were operational in 2017, Deputy Minister
for Railways Development Kweku Agyenim Boateng has revealed.
Addressing Parliament
when he appeared on the floor to answer questions on steps being taken by the ministry
to ensure safety on the country’s rail network, he said the operational stretches
are Takoradi to Nsuta on the Western line, as well as Accra to Tema and Accra
to Nsawam on the Eastern line.
Government is keen to
revamping the country’s railway system by retraining all workers of the company
to ensure modern operational standards.
With the inception of
freight services from Nsuta to Takoradi for hauling manganese, the remaining
sections of the rail network are not operational due to tracks track’s poor
state.
To ensure passenger
comfort and safety, over 50 track-workers have been engaged by the Ghana
Railway Company Limited (GRCL) to rehabilitate the Accra-Nsawam section of the
line [Eastern line], the minister noted.
Furthermore, GRCL is in
the process of securing ballast and treated wooden sleepers [railroad ties] to
be used in rehabilitation works to bring the line back to good operating
standards.
Similarly, on the Western
line GRCL has intensified its ongoing rehabilitation of the track from Nsuta to
Tarkwa.
“It is anticipated that
the ongoing track-rehabilitation work on the two lines will be completed by the
first quarter of 2018 for efficient train operations to commence.”
The Ghana Railway
Development Authority (GRDA) and GRCL are in the process of installing
additional level-crossing mechanisms at major rail road intersections to
improve pedestrian and vehicular safety.
Old coaches and
locomotives are being refurbished in order to ensure passenger safety before
the reintroduction of passenger services; spare-parts for the coaches have also
been procured, and currently 15 coaches are being refurbished.
“We will not reintroduce
the service until the tracks and coaches are declared safe by the government
regulator [GRDA].”
The Railway Act 2008, Act
779, has several provisions in relation to the safety of railway service
operations.
Mr. Agyenim Boateng emphasised
that the ministry has directed the GRDA to, as a matter of urgency, build its
capacity to exercise its full power and authority as a regulator of the sector,
to enable it ensure the safety of all aspects of rail service.
He added that government
is collaborating with the University of Mines and Technology (UMAT) to retool
and retrain workers of GRCL to improve their capacity and build a good safety
culture.
As a policy, all new
railway construction is expected to be standard-gauge with engineering designs
that have a high level of safety.B&FT
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