The agreement,
finalized on June 6 during an online ceremony, details financing, the route,
and the operation and maintenance of the railway. Construction is set to begin
in October.
The agreement establishes the legal
framework for the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan (CKU) railway, which will have an
annual throughput capacity of 15 million tonnes. The railway is expected to
reduce travel distances from China to Europe by 900 kilometers, significantly
shortening travel times. Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov confirmed the
construction start date in October.
Kyrgyzstan, being landlocked, views the CKU railway as
a crucial development for improving its international connectivity and easing
access to foreign markets. Uzbek President
Shavkat Mirziyoyev echoed this sentiment, highlighting the railway’s potential
to open routes to South Asia and the Middle East via the Trans-Afghan Corridor.
The agreement follows prolonged funding
challenges, particularly for the costly Kyrgyz section through mountainous
terrain. In April, a Kyrgyz official estimated the country’s funding needs at
eight billion dollars. Kyrgyzstan faces limitations on borrowing due to its
large national debt and legal restrictions on the proportion of debt from a
single foreign source. Despite already owing 42% of its debt to China,
Kyrgyzstan would likely need to borrow more from China for the CKU line, a move
it has been hesitant to make. While the
countries have reached a solution, they have not disclosed the funding details.
The 523-kilometer rail line will begin
in Kashgar, China, cross Kyrgyzstan’s southern border, pass through Jalal-Abad,
and terminate in Andijan, Uzbekistan’s Ferghana valley. Despite Kyrgyzstan’s
appeal for the route to include its northern capital, Bishkek, the final route
does not include this stop.
The operation and maintenance of the railway will be
managed through a joint venture proposed by Uzbekistan and positively received
by China and Kyrgyzstan. However, the specifics of this joint venture remain
unspecified.